This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.

In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.

Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.

Displaying 1 - 3 of 3
Filtering by

Clear all filters

156980-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The composition of planets and their volatile contents are intimately connected to the structure and evolution of their parent protoplanetary disks. The transport of momentum and volatiles is often parameterized by a turbulent viscosity parameter $\alpha$, which is usually assumed to be spatially and temporally uniform across the disk. I

The composition of planets and their volatile contents are intimately connected to the structure and evolution of their parent protoplanetary disks. The transport of momentum and volatiles is often parameterized by a turbulent viscosity parameter $\alpha$, which is usually assumed to be spatially and temporally uniform across the disk. I show that variable $\alpha$(r,z) (where $r$ is radius, and $z$ is height from the midplane) attributable to angular momentum transport due to MRI can yield disks with significantly different structure, as mass piles up in the 1-10 AU region resulting in steep slopes of p $>$ 2 here (where p is the power law exponent in $\Sigma \propto r^{-p}$). I also show that the transition radius (where bulk mass flow switches from inward to outward) can move as close in as 3 AU; this effect (especially prominent in externally photoevaporated disks) may significantly influence the radial water content available during planet formation.

I then investigate the transport of water in disks with different variable α profiles. While radial temperature profile sets the location of the water snowline (i.e., inside of which water is present as vapor; outside of which, as ice on solids), it is the rates of diffusion and drift of small icy solids and diffusion of vapor across the snow line that determine the radial water distribution. All of these processes are highly sensitive to local $\alpha$. I calculate the effect of radially varying α on water transport, by tracking the abundance of vapor in the inner disk, and fraction of ice in particles and larger asteroids beyond the snow line. I find one α profile attributable to winds and hydrodynamical instabilities, and motivated by meteoritic constraints, to show considerable agreement with inferred water contents observed in solar system asteroids.

Finally, I calculate the timing of gap formation due to the formation of a planet in disks around different stars. Here, I assume that pebble accretion is the dominant mechanism for planetary growth and that the core of the first protoplanet forms at the water snow line. I discuss the dependence of gap timing to various stellar and disk properties.
ContributorsKalyaan, Anusha (Author) / Desch, Steven J (Thesis advisor) / Groppi, Christopher (Committee member) / Young, Patrick (Committee member) / Shkolnik, Evgenya (Committee member) / Bell, James (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
155766-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
I present a catalog of 1,794 stellar evolution models for solar-type and low-mass stars, which is intended to help characterize real host-stars of interest during the ongoing search for potentially habitable exoplanets. The main grid is composed of 904 tracks, for 0.5-1.2 M_sol at scaled metallicity values of 0.1-1.5 Z_sol

I present a catalog of 1,794 stellar evolution models for solar-type and low-mass stars, which is intended to help characterize real host-stars of interest during the ongoing search for potentially habitable exoplanets. The main grid is composed of 904 tracks, for 0.5-1.2 M_sol at scaled metallicity values of 0.1-1.5 Z_sol and specific elemental abundance ratio values of 0.44-2.28 O/Fe_sol, 0.58-1.72 C/Fe_sol, 0.54-1.84 Mg/Fe_sol, and 0.5-2.0 Ne/Fe_sol. The catalog includes a small grid of late stage evolutionary tracks (25 models), as well as a grid of M-dwarf stars for 0.1-0.45 M_sol (856 models). The time-dependent habitable zone evolution is calculated for each track, and is strongly dependent on stellar mass, effective temperature, and luminosity parameterizations. I have also developed a subroutine for the stellar evolution code TYCHO that implements a minimalist coupled model for estimating changes in the stellar X-ray luminosity, mass loss, rotational velocity, and magnetic activity over time; to test the utility of the updated code, I created a small grid (9 models) for solar-mass stars, with variations in rotational velocity and scaled metallicity. Including this kind of information in the catalog will ultimately allow for a more robust consideration of the long-term conditions that orbiting planets may experience.

In order to gauge the true habitability potential of a given planetary system, it is extremely important to characterize the host-star's mass, specific chemical composition, and thus the timescale over which the star will evolve. It is also necessary to assess the likelihood that a planet found in the "instantaneous" habitable zone has actually had sufficient time to become "detectably" habitable. This catalog provides accurate stellar evolution predictions for a large collection of theoretical host-stars; the models are of particular utility in that they represent the real variation in stellar parameters that have been observed in nearby stars.
ContributorsTruitt, Amanda Rosendall (Author) / Young, Patrick (Thesis advisor) / Anbar, Ariel (Committee member) / Desch, Steven (Committee member) / Patience, Jennifer (Committee member) / Shkolnik, Evgenya (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
189292-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Most stars in our galaxy are M–dwarfs, much cooler and smaller than the sun. The ubiquitous nature of these stars is also paired with the formation of terrestrial exoplanets orbiting them. The strategic placement of M-dwarfs between main-sequence stars and brown dwarfs, their uniqueness as exoplanet analogs, and their dominating

Most stars in our galaxy are M–dwarfs, much cooler and smaller than the sun. The ubiquitous nature of these stars is also paired with the formation of terrestrial exoplanets orbiting them. The strategic placement of M-dwarfs between main-sequence stars and brown dwarfs, their uniqueness as exoplanet analogs, and their dominating presence in the galactic stellar population make them priority targets for study. This work investigates outstanding questions, including the need to acquire constraints on their chemical compositions to decode formation processes, evolution, and interaction with companion objects. Chapter 1 lays out a broad background emphasizing the importance of studying the most populous star in the galaxy, their far-reaching implications, and primarily the numerous challenges in characterizing the atmospheres and environments of these stars. Chapter 2 investigates the influence of M-dwarf star spots propagating into spectra of transiting terrestrial planets, showing that inaccurate modeling of M-dwarf photospheres leads to significant bias when inferring atmospheric properties of companion exoplanets. These biases persist despite correcting M-dwarf spot signatures imprinted onto the exoplanetary spectra, even with high-fidelity JWST observations. This result emphasizes the need for improved stellar atmosphere models as the first step to improving our understanding of the companion planets. To address this, chapter 3 introduces SPHINX—a new stellar atmosphere model grid for M-dwarfs. SPHINX provides improved constraints on fundamental properties of benchmark M-dwarf systems (e.g., temperature, surface gravity, radius, and chemistry). The improvement is significant relative to the state-of-the-art stellar model grid available today. Chapter 4 expands this model, applying it to mid-to-late type M-dwarfs, and investigating chemical trends in their atmospheric properties. Using low-resolution observations, both archival data (from SpeX Prism Library Database) and from previous empirical studies; this chapter presents constraints on fundamental atmospheric properties of 71 low-mass, late-type M-dwarfs to understand spectroscopic degeneracies arising due to stellar activity, cloud/dust condensation and convection. With SPHINX models, the chemical properties of these stars are compared against main-sequence stars to acquire a more holistic understanding of M-dwarfs as a class—in the quest to ultimately characterize their companions.
ContributorsIyer, Aishwarya (Author) / Line, Michael (Thesis advisor) / Patience, Jennifer (Committee member) / Young, Patrick (Committee member) / Shkolnik, Evgenya (Committee member) / O'Rourke, Joseph (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023