Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Observations of planetary systems
- 2 Protoplanetary disk structure
- 3 Protoplanetary disk evolution
- 4 Planetesimal formation
- 5 Terrestrial planet formation
- 6 Giant planet formation
- 7 Early evolution of planetary systems
- Appendix 1 Physical and astronomical constants
- Appendix 2 N-body methods
- References
- Index
2 - Protoplanetary disk structure
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Observations of planetary systems
- 2 Protoplanetary disk structure
- 3 Protoplanetary disk evolution
- 4 Planetesimal formation
- 5 Terrestrial planet formation
- 6 Giant planet formation
- 7 Early evolution of planetary systems
- Appendix 1 Physical and astronomical constants
- Appendix 2 N-body methods
- References
- Index
Summary
Planets form from protoplanetary disks of gas and dust that are observed to surround young stars for the first few million years of their evolution. Disks form because stars are born from relatively diffuse gas (with particle number density n ~ 105 cm−3) that has too much angular momentum to collapse directly to stellar densities (n ~ 1024 cm−3). Disks survive as well-defined quasi-equilibrium structures because once gas settles into a disk around a young star its specific angular momentum increases with radius. To accrete, angular momentum must be lost from, or redistributed within, the disk gas, and this process turns out to require time scales that are much longer than the orbital or dynamical time scale.
In this chapter we discuss the structure of protoplanetary disks. Anticipating the fact that angular momentum transport is slow, we assume here that the disk is a static structure. This approximation suffices for a first study of the temperature, density, and composition profiles of protoplanetary disks, which are critical inputs for models of planet formation. It also permits investigation of the predicted emission from disks that can be compared to a large body of astronomical observations. We defer for Chapter 3 the tougher question of how the gas and solids within the disk evolve with time.
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- Astrophysics of Planet Formation , pp. 34 - 64Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009