Friday, February 26, 2016
February 29, 2016 3:30 BPB-217. Candidate: Zhaohuan Zhu. From Protoplanetary Disks to Exoplanets: Theory Confronts Observations.
We are entering a golden era of study in the field of planet
formation. Recently commissioned telescopes and instruments (e.g.,
Subaru, GPI, VLA, ALMA, EVLA) are now finally able to resolve the
protoplanetary disk down to the scale of a planet's immediate assembly
zone, and a rich variety of disk features have been revealed: gaps,
large scale disk asymmetry, and spiral arms. Despite this progress on
the observational front, theoretical models have yet to be developed
that can reveal what these observations are telling us about the
physics of disk structure and planet formation. In this talk, I will
present my work on numerical simulations of planet-disk interaction,
with an emphasis on understanding current observations. My simulations
have not only successfully reproduced observed spiral arms, gaps and
asymmetric features, but also constrained protoplanetary disk
properties and revealed potential planets in these disks. To directly
find young planets, I will suggest that disks around these forming
planets, so-called circumplanetary disks, could be the key and we may
have already found some circumplanetary disk candidates. Finally, I
will discuss how the new generation of numerical codes and simulations
I am working on are important for not only interpreting upcoming
observations but also revealing fundamental physical processes in
protoplanetary disks. Combining the new generation of observations and
simulations, we may finally unveil the mystery of planet formation in
the next decade.