ArXiv TLDR

Icy Volatile Enhancements in Evolving Protoplanetary Disks

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2604.14124

Elizabeth Yunerman, Ellen Price, Karin Öberg

astro-ph.EP

TLDR

Dynamic protoplanetary disks robustly enhance volatile ice ratios, leading to high C/O and N/O in forming planets.

Key contributions

  • Expands on previous work by including more C, N, O species and particle sizes in dynamic disk models.
  • Identifies early disk desiccation and later outward advection as key mechanisms for volatile ice enhancement.
  • Predicts solid C/O and N/O ratios near 1 beyond hypervolatile ice lines, far exceeding static disk expectations.
  • Demonstrates hypervolatiles increase ~100x, while mid-volatiles show 2-50x enhancement depending on model.

Why it matters

This research is fundamental for predicting planet compositions, showing that dynamic disk processes drastically alter volatile materials. It reveals planets can form with much higher C/O and N/O ratios than previously thought, impacting our understanding of exoplanet habitability and atmospheric chemistry.

Original Abstract

Protoplanetary disk ice lines shape a multitude of planet formation processes, setting the environmental composition through evolution. Ice line locations depend on molecular sublimation and deposition properties, but in dynamic disks where temperature and density structures change, so do the expected compositions of planets and planetesimals. In turbulent viscous disks with particle drift, thermal evolution, and desorption/adsorption, Price et al. 2021 demonstrated that the CO/H$_2$O ice ratio beyond the CO ice line can become enhanced by $\sim10\times$. We expand on their work by incorporating additional carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen species, more particle sizes, and a broader disk parameter exploration. We find that before $\sim0.5$Myr, volatile ices are enhanced relative to H$_2$O as the outer disk is desiccated by drift, while at later disk times outward advection and volatile deposition further increase relative volatile icy enhancements beyond the evolving critical disk radius. The outcome of these combined relative icy enhancement to H$_2$O mechanisms is solid C/O $\sim$ N/O $\sim1$ beyond the hypervolatile ice lines, much higher than expected in static disks. Hypervolatiles (N$_2$, CO, and CH$_4$) robustly increase to $\sim100\times$ across the explored parameter space, while mid-volatiles (CO$_2$ and NH$_3$) are sensitive to model choices, with enhancements ranging from $\sim2-50\times$. Together these results demonstrate that coupling disk dynamics with simple sublimation and deposition chemistry is fundamental to predicting grain, planetesimal, and planetary compositions, particularly the role of advection in redistributing volatiles across disk radii.

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