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On the Final Mass of Giant Planets

Authors :
Estrada, P. R
Mosqueira, I
Source :
Lunar and Planetary Science XXXV: Origin of Planetary Systems.
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2004.

Abstract

In the core accretion model of giant planet formation, when the core reaches critical mass, hydrostatic equilibrium is no longer possible and gas accretion ensues. If the envelope is radiative, the critical core mass is nearly independent of the boundary conditions and is roughly M(sub crit) ~ 10Mass of the Earth (with weak dependence on the rate of planetesimal accretion M(sub core) and the disk opacity k). Given that such a core may form at the present location of Jupiter in a time comparable to its Type I migration time (10(exp 5) - 10(exp 6) years) provided that the nebula was significantly enhanced in solids with respect to the MMSN and stall at this location in a weakly turbulent (alpha approximately less than 10(exp -4) disk, it may be appropriate to assume that such objects inevitably form and drive the evolution of late-phase T Tauri star disks. Here we investigate the final masses of giant planets in disks with one or more than one such cores. Although the presence of several planets would lead to Type II migration (due to the effective viscosity resulting from the planetary tidal torques), we ignore this complication for now and simply assume that each core has stalled at its location in the disk. Once a core has achieved critical mass, its gaseous accretion is governed by the given Kelvin-Helmholtz timescale.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Lunar and Planetary Science XXXV: Origin of Planetary Systems
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20040055965
Document Type :
Report