Protoplanetary disks and hard X-rays

Author
Abstract

The physics of protoplanetary disks and the early stages of planet formation is strongly affected by the level of ionization of the largely-neutral gas (Armitage 2009; Balbus 2009). Where the ionization fraction is above some limit around ~ 10−12, the magnetorotational instability (MRI) will ensue and the gas will become turbulent. The presence or absence of disk turbulence at various locations and times has profound implications for viscosity, accretion, dust settling, protoplanet migration and other physical processes. The dominant source of ionization is very likely X-rays from the host star (Glassgold et al. 2000). X-ray emission is elevated in all pre-main sequence stars primarily due to the magnetic reconnection flares similar to, but much more powerful and frequent than, flares on the surface of the contemporary Sun (Feigelson et al. 2007).

Year of Conference
2009
Conference Name
Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union
Volume
5
Start Page or Article ID
744
Date Published
2009-11
ISSN Number
1743-9221
DOI
10.1017/S1743921310011312
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Publication Status
JILA PI
JILA Topics
Conference Proceedings