Streaming instabilities in weakly ionized protoplanetary discs: the Ambipolar Streaming Instability (AmSI)
TLDR
Ambipolar diffusion in protoplanetary discs drives a new resonant drag instability (AmSI) that destabilizes Alfvén waves, crucial for planetesimal formation.
Key contributions
- Dust feedback stabilizes MRI oblique modes involved in ambipolar-shear instability in protoplanetary discs.
- Identifies a strong resonant drag instability (RDI) driven by ambipolar diffusion (AmSI) in magnetized discs.
- AmSI destabilizes Alfvén waves via gas-dust drift, with ambipolar diffusion broadening the resonance.
- This instability has significant growth rates, potentially bridging dust grain growth to planetesimal formation.
Why it matters
This research is crucial for understanding planet formation in weakly ionized protoplanetary discs. It identifies the Ambipolar Streaming Instability (AmSI), providing a mechanism for dust grains to grow into planetesimals. This bridges a critical gap in current planet formation theories, even in dust-poor conditions.
Original Abstract
The regions of protoplanetary discs where planets can form are believed to be weakly ionised, suggesting thereby that non-ideal magneto-hydrodynamics (MHD) effects play an important role in the disc dynamics and in the planet formation process. In particular, the combined effect of ohmic resistivity and ambipolar diffusion can be responsible for launching MHD-driven disc winds. In this context, we focus on the effect of ambipolar diffusion (AD) and examine the stability of a dusty, magnetized disc by employing both linear stability analyses and numerical simulations. We show that dust feedback tends to stabilize the MRI oblique modes involved in the ambipolar-shear instability. We also find that ambipolar diffusion leads to the onset of a strong resonant drag instability (RDI), in which an Alfvén wave is destabilized by the relative drift between the gas and dust components. The main impact of AD is to modify the Alfvén wave frequency, resulting in a large resonance width. The instability is found to have significant growth rates even in dust-poor discs and for tightly coupled particles, which may help to bridge the gap between growth of dust grains through coagulation and planetesimal formation.
📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest
Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.