Recent studies on the planet-dominated regime of Type II migration showed that, contrary to the conventional wisdom, massive planets can migrate outwards. Using ‘fixed-planet’ simulations, these studies found a correlation between the sign of the torques acting on the planet and the parameter K′ (which describes the depth of the gap carved by the planet in the disc). We perform ‘live-planet’ simulations exploring a range of K′ and disc mass values to test and extend these results. The excitation of planet eccentricity in live-planet simulations breaks the direct dependence of migration rate (rate of change of semimajor axis) on the torques imposed, an effect that ‘fixed-planet’ simulations cannot treat. By disentangling the contribution to ...
Aims. Massive planets that open a gap in the accretion disk are believed to migrate with exactly the...
Context. Extrasolar giant planets are found to orbit their host stars with a broad range of semi-maj...
Context. Giant planets open gaps in their protoplanetary and subsequently suffer so-called type II m...
International audienceRecent studies on the planet-dominated regime of Type II migration showed that...
International audienceRecent studies on the planet-dominated regime of Type II migration showed that...
Context. The migration of planets plays an important role in the early planet-formation pr...
Context. Several recent studies have found that planet migration in adiabatic disks differs signific...
ABSTRACT In this paper, we analyse giant gap-opening planet migration in proto-planet...
Context. The origin of giant planets at moderate separations ≃1–10 au is still not fully understood ...
We study torques on migrating low-mass planets in locally isothermal discs. Previous work on low-mas...
Planets are believed to form in primordial gas-dust discs surrounding newborn stars. An important br...
International audienceContext. Giant planets open gaps in their protoplanetary and subsequently suff...
Context.Our previous models of a giant planet migrating through an inner protoplanet/planetesimal di...
Aims. Massive planets that open a gap in the accretion disk are believed to migrate with exactly the...
Aims. Massive planets that open a gap in the accretion disk are believed to migrate with exactly the...
Aims. Massive planets that open a gap in the accretion disk are believed to migrate with exactly the...
Context. Extrasolar giant planets are found to orbit their host stars with a broad range of semi-maj...
Context. Giant planets open gaps in their protoplanetary and subsequently suffer so-called type II m...
International audienceRecent studies on the planet-dominated regime of Type II migration showed that...
International audienceRecent studies on the planet-dominated regime of Type II migration showed that...
Context. The migration of planets plays an important role in the early planet-formation pr...
Context. Several recent studies have found that planet migration in adiabatic disks differs signific...
ABSTRACT In this paper, we analyse giant gap-opening planet migration in proto-planet...
Context. The origin of giant planets at moderate separations ≃1–10 au is still not fully understood ...
We study torques on migrating low-mass planets in locally isothermal discs. Previous work on low-mas...
Planets are believed to form in primordial gas-dust discs surrounding newborn stars. An important br...
International audienceContext. Giant planets open gaps in their protoplanetary and subsequently suff...
Context.Our previous models of a giant planet migrating through an inner protoplanet/planetesimal di...
Aims. Massive planets that open a gap in the accretion disk are believed to migrate with exactly the...
Aims. Massive planets that open a gap in the accretion disk are believed to migrate with exactly the...
Aims. Massive planets that open a gap in the accretion disk are believed to migrate with exactly the...
Context. Extrasolar giant planets are found to orbit their host stars with a broad range of semi-maj...
Context. Giant planets open gaps in their protoplanetary and subsequently suffer so-called type II m...