Turbulence in protoplanetary disks affects dust evolution and planetesimal formation. The vertical shear instability (VSI) is one of the candidate turbulence-driving mechanisms in the outer disk region. Since the VSI requires rapid gas cooling, dust particles in disks can influence and potentially control VSI-driven turbulence. However, VSI-driven turbulence has a strong vertical motion, causing vertical diffusion of particles. As a result of this interaction, it remains unclear how turbulent structures and dust distributions form and persist. We aim to clarify whether the VSI can drive turbulence and achieve a quasi-steady dust distribution under cooling rate evolution associated with turbulently diffusing dust. We also seek to determine the dependence of the dust size and dust-to-gas mass ratio on the realization and persistence of the equilibrium state. We perform global two-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations of an axisymmetric protoplanetary disk to investigate how the VSI drives turbulence and maintains a balance between dust settling and diffusion. These simulations account for the dynamic interplay between dust distribution, cooling rates, and turbulence. We find that VSI mixing, dust settling, and local dust cooling reach an equilibrium, forming a thick dust layer with a dimensionless vertical mixing coefficient of approximately α_ ̊m diff ≈ 10^. The ability of the VSI to sustain this state also depends on the dust size and dust-to-gas mass ratio. Larger grains or lower mass ratios weaken turbulence, leading to dust settling. The condition of equilibrium state existence is consistent with the prediction of the semi-analytic model presented by a previous study. Our results indicate that efficient turbulent dust mixing and efficient cooling can occur simultaneously. They also imply that turbulence in VSI-dominated disks has different levels of intensity depending on the grain size. This suggests that the efficiency of dust growth can depend on the VSI in protoplanetary disks.
Fukuhara et al. (Wed,) studied this question.