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On the Snow Line in Dusty Protoplanetary Disks

D. D. Sasselov et al 2000 ApJ 528 995-998   doi: 10.1086/308209  Help

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D. D. Sasselov1 and M. Lecar1
1 Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, 60 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA 02138

ABSTRACT. C. Hayashi prescribed a "minimum-mass solar nebula," which contained just enough material to make the planets. This prescription, which has been widely used in constructing scenarios for planet formation, proposed that ice will condense when the temperature falls below 170 K (the "snow line"). In Hayashi's model, that occurred at 2.7 AU. It is usually assumed that the cores of the giant planets (e.g., Jupiter) form beyond the snow line. The snow line, in Hayashi's model, is where the temperature of a black body that absorbed direct sunlight and reradiated as much as it absorbed would be 170 K. Since Hayashi, there have been a series of more detailed models of the absorption by dust of the stellar radiation and of accretional heating, which alter the location of the snow line. We have attempted a "self-consistent" model of a T Tauri disk in the sense that we used dust properties and calculated surface temperatures that matched observed disks. We then calculated the midplane temperature for those disks, with no accretional heating or with small (≤10-8 Msun yr-1) accretion rates. (Larger accretion rates can push the snow line out to beyond 4 AU but do not match the observed disks.) Our models bring the snow line in to the neighborhood of 1 AU—not far enough to explain the close planetary companions to other stars, but much closer than in recent starting lines for orbit migration scenarios.

Subject headings: accretion, accretion disks; dust, extinction; interplanetary medium; planetary systems; radiative transfer; stars: pre-main sequence

Print publication: Issue 2 (2000 January 10)
Received 1999 May 19, accepted for publication 1999 August 31

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