In protoplanetary discs the aerodynamical friction between particles and gas induces a variety of instabilities that facilitate planet formation. Of these we examine the so-called ‘secular gravitational instability’ (SGI) in the two-fluid approximation, deriving analytical expressions for its stability criteria and growth rates. Concurrently, we present a physical explanation of the instability that shows how it manifests upon an intermediate range of lengthscales exhibiting geostrophic balance in the gas component. The two-fluid SGI is completely quenched within a critical disc radius, as large as 10 au and 30 au for centimetre- and millimetre-sized particles, respectively, although establishing robust estimates is hampered by uncertaintie...
Gravitational instability plays an important role in driving gas accretion in massive protostellar d...
For a long time, gravitational instability in the disk of planetesimals has been suspected to be the...
We investigate the formation of planetesimals via the gravitational instability of solids that have ...
We carry out three dimensional smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations to study the role of grav...
Abstract Gravitational instability (GI) controls the dynamics of young massive protop...
Planets form in circumstellar discs as dust grains collide together and form ever larger bodies. How...
In this paper we consider the evolution of small planetesimals (radii similar to1-10 m) in marginall...
The work performed here studies particle dynamics in local two-dimensional simulations of self-grav...
[[abstract]]We investigate the formation of planetesimals via the gravitational instability of solid...
This pedagogical review covers an unsolved problem in the theory of protoplanetary disks: the growth...
The gravitational instability (GI) theory of planet formation describes how planets are born via the...
Some observed exoplanets cannot be explained in the standard core accretion paradigm. An alternative...
Recent high-resolution observations of protoplanetary disks have revealed a myriad of fascinating st...
Axisymmetric dust rings are a ubiquitous feature of young protoplanetary disks. These rings are like...
Protoplanetary gas disks are likely to experience gravitational instabilities (GI’s) during some pha...
Gravitational instability plays an important role in driving gas accretion in massive protostellar d...
For a long time, gravitational instability in the disk of planetesimals has been suspected to be the...
We investigate the formation of planetesimals via the gravitational instability of solids that have ...
We carry out three dimensional smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations to study the role of grav...
Abstract Gravitational instability (GI) controls the dynamics of young massive protop...
Planets form in circumstellar discs as dust grains collide together and form ever larger bodies. How...
In this paper we consider the evolution of small planetesimals (radii similar to1-10 m) in marginall...
The work performed here studies particle dynamics in local two-dimensional simulations of self-grav...
[[abstract]]We investigate the formation of planetesimals via the gravitational instability of solid...
This pedagogical review covers an unsolved problem in the theory of protoplanetary disks: the growth...
The gravitational instability (GI) theory of planet formation describes how planets are born via the...
Some observed exoplanets cannot be explained in the standard core accretion paradigm. An alternative...
Recent high-resolution observations of protoplanetary disks have revealed a myriad of fascinating st...
Axisymmetric dust rings are a ubiquitous feature of young protoplanetary disks. These rings are like...
Protoplanetary gas disks are likely to experience gravitational instabilities (GI’s) during some pha...
Gravitational instability plays an important role in driving gas accretion in massive protostellar d...
For a long time, gravitational instability in the disk of planetesimals has been suspected to be the...
We investigate the formation of planetesimals via the gravitational instability of solids that have ...