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A&A 462, 977-987 (2007)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20066363
The photophoretic sweeping of dust in transient protoplanetary disks
O. Krauss1, G. Wurm1, O. Mousis2, J.-M. Petit2, J. Horner3, and Y. Alibert31 Institut für Planetologie, University of Münster, Wilhelm-Klemm-Str. 10, 48149 Münster, Germany
e-mail: okrauss@uni-muenster.de
2 Observatoire de Besançon, CNRS-UMR 6091, BP 1615, 25010 Besançon Cedex, France
3 Physikalisches Institut, University of Bern, Sidlerstrasse 5, 3012 Bern, Switzerland
(Received 8 September 2006 / Accepted 6 November 2006 )
Abstract
Context.Protoplanetary disks start their lives with a dust free inner region
where the temperatures are higher than the sublimation temperature of
solids. As the star illuminates the innermost particles, which are
immersed in gas at the sublimation edge, these particles are subject
to a photophoretic force.
Aims.We examine the motion of dust particles at the inner edge of
protoplanetary disks due to photophoretic drag.
Methods.We give a detailed treatment of the photophoretic force for particles
in protoplanetary disks. The force is applied to particles at the
inner edge of a protoplanetary disk and the dynamical behavior of the
particles is analyzed.
Results.We find that, in a laminar disk, photophoretic drag increases
the size of the inner hole after accretion onto the central body has
become subdued. This region within the hole becomes an optically
transparent zone containing gas and large dusty particles (
10 cm), but devoid of, or strongly depleted in, smaller dust
aggregates. Photophoresis can clear the inner disk of dust out to 10 AU in less than 1 Myr. The details of this clearance depend on the
size distribution of the dust. Any replenishment of the dust within
the cleared region will be continuously and rapidly swept out to the
edge. At late times, the edge reaches a stable equilibrium between
inward drift and photophoretic outward drift, at a distance of some
tens of AU. Eventually, the edge will move inwards again as the disk
disperses, shifting the equilibrium position back from about 40 AU to
below 30 AU in 1-2 Myr in the disk model. In a turbulent disk,
diffusion can delay the clearing of a disk by
photophoresis. Smaller and/or age-independent holes of radii of
a few AU are also possible outcomes of turbulent diffusion
counteracting photophoresis.
Conclusions.This outward and then inward moving edge marks a region of high dust
concentration. This density enhancement, and the efficient transport
of particles from close to the star to large distances away, can
explain features of comets such as high measured ratios of crystalline
to amorphous silicates, and has a large number of other applications.
Key words: stars: circumstellar matter -- stars: planetary systems: protoplanetary disks -- solar system: formation -- comets: general
© ESO 2007
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