A&A talk:  Konstantin Gerbig (Yale University)

10:00–11:00 am ERC 401

Host: Diana Powell

Konstantin Gerbig (Yale University) "New Perspectives on Planetesimal Formation through Diffusive Instabilities"

The assembly of planetesimals, a key step in the formation of planets, remains riddled with questions. In particular, there is ambiguity regarding the environments in which dust accumulations at the mid-planes of protoplanetary disks become unstable to their own self-gravity, and contract to form planetesimals. Moreover, how these specific conditions relate to the planetesimal initial mass function (IMF) is uncertain. In this talk, I aim to investigate these questions. Drawing upon the analogy of underwater sand ripples, I first introduce a new linear, axisymmetric instability that leads to filament formation in the dusty mid-plane of protoplanetary disks, provided diffusivity decreases sufficiently fast with increasing dust loading — a premise supported by our numerical simulations of protoplanetary disks where dust-gas interactions self-generate turbulent diffusion. Next, I discuss the IMF of planetesimals that form when these filaments fragment under their own self-gravity. I present an analytic framework that maps the turbulent conditions in the filament onto the IMF as well as numerical simulations of planetesimal formation. This theory provides characteristic size predictions for initial planetesimals that are of order 100km, an estimate consistent with Asteroid Data data.

Event Type

Talks

Sep 27