Document detail
ID

oai:arXiv.org:2411.14643

Topic
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary...
Author
Ormel, C. W.
Category

sciences: astrophysics

Year

2024

listing date

12/18/2024

Keywords
planet particles accretion
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Abstract

Pebble accretion refers to the growth of planetary bodies through the accretion of pebble-sized particles.

Pebbles are defined in terms of their aerodynamically size $\tau_s$, which describes the level of coupling to the disk gas.

Observations confirms the presence of pebble-sized particles in both protoplanetary disks and the early solar system.

Pebble accretion proceeds through the settling mechanism, where particles settle to the surface of the planet.

This Chapter discusses the key aspects of the pebble accretion framework: the accretion regimes, the planet initiation mass, and the planet isolation masses.

The accretion behavior of loosely coupled $\tau_s > 1$ particles, referred to as "large pebbles", is also examined.

The pebble accretion probability, $\epsilon$, is shown to be a useful parameter for evaluating the efficiency of the process, though this quantity is not necessarily high.

Distinctions between pebble and planetesimal accretion are outlined.

Pebble accretion, in particular, can be a highly effective mechanism in dense rings, as witnessed with ALMA.

;Comment: To be published in: Handbook of Exoplanets, 2nd Edition, Hans Deeg and Juan Antonio Belmonte (Eds.

in Chief), Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature.

25 pages, 5 figures.

Revised after addressing comments from editors and community

Ormel, C. W., 2024, Pebble Accretion

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