4.7 Article

The properties of discs around planets and brown dwarfs as evidence for disc fragmentation

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 449, Issue 4, Pages 3432-3440

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stv526

Keywords

accretion, accretion discs; hydrodynamics; methods: numerical; protoplanetary discs; brown dwarfs; stars: formation; stars: low-mass

Funding

  1. STFC [ST/M000877/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Direct imaging searches have revealed many very low mass objects, including a small number of planetary-mass objects, as wide-orbit companions to young stars. The formation mechanism of these objects remains uncertain. In this paper, we present the predictions of the disc fragmentation model regarding the properties of the discs around such low-mass objects. We find that the discs around objects that have formed by fragmentation in discs hosted by Sun-like stars (referred to as parent discs and parent stars) are more massive than expected from the M-disc-M-* relation (which is derived for stars with masses M-* > 0.2M(circle dot)). Accordingly, the accretion rates on to these objects are also higher than expected from the. M-*-M-* relation. Moreover, there is no significant correlation between the mass of the brown dwarf or planet with the mass of its disc nor with the accretion rate from the disc on to it. The discs around objects that form by disc fragmentation have larger than expected masses as they accrete gas from the disc of their parent star during the first few kyr after they form. The amount of gas that they accrete and therefore their mass depend on how they move in their parent disc and how they interact with it. Observations of disc masses and accretion rates on to very low mass objects are consistent with the predictions of the disc fragmentation model. Future observations (e.g. by Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array) of disc masses and accretion rates on to substellar objects that have even lower masses (young planets and young, low-mass brown dwarfs), where the scaling relations predicted by the disc fragmentation model diverge significantly from the corresponding relations established for higher mass stars, will test the predictions of this model.

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