Visit ASIAA Homepage Registration Deadline: February 8, 2021 (Taiwan Time)
From cores to codes: planning for the next steps in planet formation
March 9(Tue)-11(Thu), 2021
Update: Due to recent restrictions, the workshop is fully online.
We will be using microsoft teams and the talks will be live

Oral Presentation

Vertically shearing streaming instabilities in protoplanetary disks

Author(s): Lin Min-Kai (ASIAA)

Presenter: Min-Kai Lin (ASIAA)

The streaming instability between dust and gas in protoplanetary disks is widely considered as the de facto mechanism for the formation of planetesimals - the building blocks of planets. In its simplest form, the linear instability can be captured in unstratified disk models that represent the midplane of protoplanetary disks. However, real disks have a vertical structure as dust grains settle towards the midplane. I present the first linear stability analyses of vertically stratified, dusty protoplanetary disks. I find, consistent with early numerical simulations, that the dominant instability in stratified disks is one driven by the vertical gradient of the dusty-gas' rotation velocity, in combination with partial dust-gas coupling. These "vertically-shearing streaming instabilities" grow much faster, although on smaller scales, than classic streaming instabilities. I briefly discuss the potential effect of vertically-shearing streaming instabilities in planetesimal formation.

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