Spiral formation caused by late infall onto protoplanetary disks
Citation: Hühn, L.-A.; Kimmig, C. N.; Dullemond, C. P.; 2026; arXiv:2603.03442
The classical picture that planet formation occurs in protoplanetary disks that are isolated from their environment is undergoing a major shift toward a more connected picture. An increasing amount of evolved disks are found to be actively interacting with their environment, often showing various types of spiral structures. In this work, we aim to investigate if these spirals can be a direct result of ongoing late infall using the grid-based 3D hydrodynamics code FARGO3D. We perform a detailed analysis of the spiral properties and appearance in scattered light and CO line emission using the radiative transfer code RADMC3D. In scattered light, we find both well-defined spirals with few arms (m=2) and more flocculent structures: The gradual accretion of gas remnants after a major accretion event has the most success in the former, whereas active accretion via streamers favors the latter. The m=2 spirals we find have a very low pattern speed, making them easily discernible from spirals caused by a perturber. We also find spiral patterns in the $^{12}$CO residual motions, but their morphology does not match the one found in scattered light. The disk perturbations are strongest in the upper layers (z>4H), which is reflected by the reduced amplitude of the residual motions in the more optically thin $^{13}$CO emission. Moreover, we find that the formation of m=2 spirals is not promoted in disks with lower mass, despite being more susceptible to deeper kinematic perturbations. While the late-infall streamers impact planet formation directly through the delivery of fresh material, we show that the midplane remains unperturbed unless the infalling mass is of the same order of magnitude as the disk mass. Planet formation can therefore only be impacted by late infall through secondary mechanisms that lead to dust trapping or the generation of turbulence starting from surface-level perturbations.