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A&A 395, 613-623 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20021274
Planetesimal clusters in a Keplerian disk
I. gravitational evolution
P. Tanga1, P. Michel1 and D. C. Richardson21 Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur, BP 4229, 06304 Nice Cedex 04, France
2 Dept. of Astronomy, Univ. of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742-2421, USA
(Received 6 May 2002 / Accepted 30 August 2002 )
Abstract
It was recently demonstrated by numerical simulations that a turbulent
flow in a rotating system is capable of efficiently concentrating passively advected
particles - having a density larger than the fluid - inside
anti-cyclonic vortices. This process has important consequences on
the distribution of solid particles
in protoplanetary disks, since dust surface densities ~1-2 orders of magnitude
higher than the background are rapidly reached in vortex cores. However,
until now, the role of self-gravitation of captured solids has been
neglected. In this work we study the action of mutual gravitational
interactions - after the gas has dissipated - over the dynamics
of planetesimals inside clusters similar to those created in vortex cores.
A comparison is made between the behavior of idealized clusters
of planetesimals characterized by ad-hoc velocity profiles, and more complex
initial conditions such as those obtained in previous
hydrodynamical simulations. We show here that, within the
explored interval of parameters, mutual scattering of particles
can quickly disperse the cluster. Our results are demonstrated to be not
dependent on the resolution employed. It can be concluded that
if large planetesimals were formed inside vortex cores, they
would be ejected by mutual perturbations.
Key words: planetary systems: formation, protoplanetary disks; gravitation
Offprint request: P. Tanga, tanga@obs-nice.fr
© ESO 2002
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