Disc lifetime distribution as a function of the mass of host star
Susanne Pfalzner, Furkan Dincer, Nienke van der Marel, Frank W. Wagner
TLDR
This study derives protoplanetary disc lifetime distributions, revealing a strong dependence on host star mass, with lower-mass stars having longer-lived discs.
Key contributions
- Derived disc lifetime distributions show a strong dependence on host star mass.
- High-mass stars have disc lifetime maxima at 3.72 Myr; low-mass stars at 7.20 Myr.
- All distributions are broad (3.2-4.7 Myr std dev), with low-mass star discs showing more breadth.
- Initial disc fraction varies, lower for higher-mass stars (approx. 40% vs 60-90%).
Why it matters
Understanding disc lifetime variability and its stellar mass dependence is crucial for accurate planet formation models. This research provides valuable, mass-dependent disc lifetime distributions that can serve as benchmarks for future planet-formation synthesis models.
Original Abstract
The lifetime of protoplanetary discs is a critical factor for planet formation. Although the mean disc lifetime provides an estimate of the typical period available for planet formation, it does not capture the substantial variability in individual disc lifetimes or their dependence on host star mass. This study addresses these limitations by deriving the disc lifetime distribution as a function of stellar mass. Our results reveal a pronounced mass-dependence. Performing a phenomenological fit using a Weibull distribution, we find the maxima of the distributions at $t_{max}^H =$3.72 Myr for high-mass stars ($\approx$ 1.00--3.00 $M_{\odot}$) and $t_{max}^L =$ 7.20 Myr for low-mass stars ($\approx$ 0.01--0.20 $M_{\odot}$) assuming an initial disc fraction of $f_{init} = 0.8$. All distributions are broad (typically 3.2 Myr $< σ<$ 4.7 Myr), with the distribution for low-mass stars being somewhat broader. Our analysis indicates that not all stars are initially surrounded by a disc (60% $< f_{init} <$ 90% at cluster zero age), and that the initial disc fraction is even lower ($f_{init} \approx$ 40%) for higher-mass stars. The potential mechanisms responsible for the observed spread and mass-dependence of disc lifetime distributions and initial disc fractions are discussed. Our primary aim is to demonstrate the methodology; more robust constraints will require improved data on mass-dependent disc fractions. Nevertheless, the derived mass-dependent disc lifetime distributions can already serve as a valuable input or a benchmark for planet-formation synthesis models.
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