On the evolution of the snow line in protoplanetary discs - II. Analytic approximations

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Abstract

We examine the evolution of the snow line in a protoplanetary disc that contains a dead zone (a region of zero or low turbulence). The snow line is within a self-gravitating part of the dead zone, and we obtain a fully analytic solution for its radius. Our formula could prove useful for future observational attempts to characterize the demographics of planets outside the snow line. External sources such as cosmic rays or X-rays from the central star can ionize the disc surface layers and allow the magnetorotational instability to drive turbulence there. We show that provided that the surface density in this layer is less than about 50 g cm-2, the dead zone solution exists, after an initial outbursting phase, until the disc is dispersed by photoevaporation. We demonstrate that the snow line radius is significantly larger than that predicted by a fully turbulent disc model, and that in our own Solar system it remains outside of the orbital radius of the Earth. Thus, the inclusion of a dead zone into a protoplanetary disc model explains how our Earth formed with very little water. ©2013 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.

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Martin, R. G., & Livio, M. (2013). On the evolution of the snow line in protoplanetary discs - II. Analytic approximations. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 434(1), 633–638. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stt1051

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