Recent observations of gaps and non-axisymmetric features in the dust distributions of transition disks have been interpreted as evidence of embedded massive protoplanets. However, comparing the predictions of planetdisk interaction models to the observed features has shown far from perfect agreement. This may be due to the strong approximations used for the predictions. For example, spiral arm fitting typically uses results that are based on lowmass planets in an isothermal gas. In this work, we describe two-dimensional, global, hydrodynamical simulations of disks with embedded protoplanets, with and without the assumption of local isothermality, for a range of planetto-star mass ratios 1-10 MJ for a 1 M⊙ star. We use the PENCIL CODE in polar coordinates for our models. We find that the inner and outer spiral wakes of massive protoplanets (M ≳ 5 MJ) produce significant shock heating that can trigger buoyant instabilities. These drive sustained turbulence throughout the disk when they occur. The strength of this effect depends strongly on the mass of the planet and the thermal relaxation timescale; for a 10 MJ planet embedded in a thin, purely adiabatic disk, the spirals, gaps, and vortices typically associated with planet-disk interactions are disrupted. We find that the effect is only weakly dependent on the initial radial temperature profile. The spirals that form in disks heated by the effects we have described may fit the spiral structures observedin transition disks better than the spirals predicted by linear isothermal theory
CITATION STYLE
Richert, A. J. W., Lyra, W., Boley, A., Low, M. M. M., & Turner, N. (2015). On shocks driven by high-mass planets in radiatively inefficient disks. I. Two-dimensional global disk simulations. Astrophysical Journal, 804(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/804/2/95
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