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Completed STUDENTSHIP UKRI Gateway to Research

Unveiling planet-forming discs with the Square Kilometre Array


Funder Science and Technology Facilities Council
Recipient Organization University of Leeds
Country United Kingdom
Start Date Apr 30, 2022
End Date Oct 31, 2025
Duration 1,280 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Student; Supervisor
Data Source UKRI Gateway to Research
Grant ID 2704460
Grant Description

Planets are born in discs of dust and gas that surround young stars, but the specific mechanisms that form them remain elusive. The upcoming Square Kilometre Array (SKA), a next generation radio telescope many times more powerful than current instruments, will have the power to 'unveil' planet forming discs, observing emission from large dust grains and molecules in their coldest and most dense regions - precisely the locations at which planets are thought to form.

In this project, the successful candidate will combine the latest observations of protoplanetary discs from the Atacama Large Millimetre/submillimetre Array (ALMA) with radiative transfer simulations to understand how the SKA will advance our understanding of planet formation. The project has two main themes, each of which can be explored depending on the interests of the candidate:

1) Growing pebbles into planets: Assembling a young planet involves the growth of micron-sized dust to centimetre sized 'pebbles', and the SKA will be uniquely sensitive to emission from these pebbles in protoplanetary discs. Combining hydrodynamic models of protoplanetary discs and growing planets, you will simulate the growth and evolution of dust grains.

You will characterise how planets sculpt the distribution of pebbles, and predict how the SKA will observe discs at different evolutionary stages.

2) Pathways of prebiotic molecules to planets: Molecules important for key biological processes here on Earth ('prebiotic') are detected throughout interstellar space, but their abundance and distribution in the vicinity of forming planets remains poorly understood. You will add the required physical and chemical processes to astrochemical disc models to reproduce the latest observations of large molecules in discs.

Armed with these models, you will predict the optimal targets, molecules and transitions to observe with SKA to uncover the prebiotic content of protoplanetary discs.

All Grantees

University of Leeds

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