Dust-driven instabilities in protoplanetary disks: toward understanding formation of planetesimals
- Date
- January 17 (Wed) at 10:30 - 11:30, 2024 (JST)
- Speaker
-
- Ryosuke Tominaga (Special Postdoctoral Researcher, Star and Planet Formation Laboratory, RIKEN Cluster for Pioneering Research (CPR))
- Language
- English
- Host
- Misako Tatsuuma
Planet formation starts from collisional growth of sub-micron-sized dust grains in a gas disk called a protoplanetary disk. They are expected to grow toward km-sized objects called planetesimals. The resulting planetesimals further coalesce by gravity and form planets. However, there are some barriers preventing planetesimal formation, which includes fast radial drift and collisional fragmentation of dust grains. To circumvent the barriers and to explain planetesimal formation, previous studies have proposed hydrodynamic instabilities of dusty-gas disks. The instabilities can cause dust clumping, and planetesimals form if the resulting clumps collapse self-gravitationally. We have been investigating the linear/nonlinear development of these dust-gas instabilities. We also found a new instability driven by collisional growth of dust, which can bridge a potential gap between the first dust growth and the later planetesimal formation via the previous instabilities. In this talk, I will introduce our work on the dust-driven instabilities and their impact on planetesimal formation.
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