ArXiv TLDR

Misaligned circumbinary discs around unequal-mass eccentric binaries: alignment, morphology, and binary accretion variability

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2604.14555

Ruiqi Yang, Jeremy L. Smallwood, Hongping Deng, Ya-Ping Li, Alessia Franchini + 2 more

astro-ph.EP

TLDR

Simulations reveal how initial tilt and mass ratio impact accretion variability and morphology in misaligned circumbinary discs around eccentric binaries.

Key contributions

  • Initial tilt and mass ratio significantly influence long-term accretion variability in circumbinary discs.
  • Polar and coplanar retrograde discs favor primary star accretion; prograde discs favor secondary.
  • Accretion ratio (η) varies non-monotonically with mass ratio, depending on disc alignment.
  • Polar discs have lowest mass loss; retrograde and strongly warped discs lose mass rapidly.

Why it matters

This research provides crucial insights into the complex dynamics of circumbinary discs, which are common in the universe. Understanding these processes is vital for interpreting astronomical observations and modeling circumbinary planet formation.

Original Abstract

Binary systems are ubiquitous in the Universe and often host circumbinary discs that are misaligned with the binary orbital plane. Such misalignments can affect disc evolution and binary accretion variability. We here present 3D hydrodynamical simulations of circumbinary discs with initial tilts $i_0$ from $0^\circ$ to $180^\circ$, around eccentric binaries with secondary-to-primary mass ratios of $0.11-0.67$. We find that both the initial tilt and mass ratio can affect the long-term accretion variability in our simulations. Discs evolving towards polar and coplanar retrograde generally favour accretion onto the primary star, while discs evolving towards coplanar prograde generally favour accretion onto the secondary. We find preferential accretion ratio $η=\langle\dot{M_2}\rangle/\langle\dot{M_\mathrm{b}}\rangle$ to be a non-monotonic function of the mass ratio. For discs close to coplanar prograde alignment, $η$ increases with decreasing mass ratio, whereas for discs with $30^\circ \le i_0 \le 135^\circ$, $η$ decreases for smaller mass ratios. Polar discs show the lowest mass loss rates, slightly lower than those of coplanar prograde discs, while retrograde discs lose mass faster than their prograde counterparts. Discs that undergo strong warping or breaking experience rapid mass loss. Our findings provide insights into observed circumbinary discs and have implications for circumbinary planet formation.

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