SIMBAD references

2019MNRAS.490.5678C - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 490, 5678-5690 (2019/December-3)

External photoevaporation of circumstellar discs constrains the time-scale for planet formation.

CONCHA-RAMIREZ F., WILHELM M.J.C., PORTEGIES ZWART S. and HAWORTH T.J.

Abstract (from CDS):

Planet-forming circumstellar discs are a fundamental part of the star formation process. Since stars form in a hierarchical fashion in groups of up to hundreds or thousands, the UV radiation environment that these discs are exposed to can vary in strength by at least six orders of magnitude. This radiation can limit the masses and sizes of the discs. Diversity in star forming environments can have long lasting effects in disc evolution and in the resulting planetary populations. We perform simulations to explore the evolution of circumstellar discs in young star clusters. We include viscous evolution, as well as the impact of dynamical encounters and external photoevaporation. We find that photoevaporation is an important process in destroying circumstellar discs: in regions of stellar density ρ ∼ 100 M pc–3 around 80 per cent of discs are destroyed before 2 \hboxMyr of cluster evolution. In regions of ρ ∼ 50 M pc–3 around 50 per cent of discs are destroyed in the same time-scale. Our findings are in agreement with observed disc fractions in young star-forming regions and support previous estimations that planet formation must start in time-scales <0.1-1 Myr.

Abstract Copyright: © 2019 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): methods: numerical - protoplanetary discs - stars: kinematics and dynamics - (stars:) planetary systems - planets and satellites: formation

Simbad objects: 12

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