The End of Runaway: How Gap Opening Limits the Final Masses of Gas Giants
Abstract
Gas giants are thought to form by runaway accretion: an instability driven by the self-gravity of growing atmospheres that causes accretion rates to rise super-linearly with planet mass. Why runaway should stop at a Jupiter or any other mass is unknown. We consider the proposal that final masses are controlled by circumstellar disc gaps (cavities) opened by planetary gravitational torques. We develop a fully time-dependent theory of gap formation and couple it self-consistently to planetary growth rates. When gaps first open, planetary torques overwhelm viscous torques, and gas depletes as if it were inviscid. In low-viscosity discs, of the kind motivated by recent observations and theory, gaps stay predominantly in this inviscid phase and planet masses finalize at M final/M( t disc)0.07(H/a)2.73(G0/2)1/3, with M the host stellar mass, the planet's orbital angular velocity, t disc the gas disc's lifetime, H/a its aspect ratio, and 0 its unperturbed density. This final mass is independent of the dimensionless viscosity α and applies to large orbital distances, typically beyond 10 AU, where disc scale heights exceed planet radii. It evaluates to a few Jupiter masses at 10-100 AU, increasing gradually with distance as gaps become harder to open.
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