A formation pathway for giant planets in S-type discs of γ-Cephei-like compact binaries
María Paula Ronco, Octavio M. Guilera, Julia Venturini, Federico Zoppetti, Marcelo M. Miller Bertolami
TLDR
Mass transfer from circumbinary discs enables giant planet formation in close binary systems like γ-Cephei, overcoming disc truncation challenges.
Key contributions
- Modeled coupled evolution of gas, dust, and planet formation in binary systems using PLANETALP-B.
- Showed continuous mass inflow from circumbinary discs significantly extends circumprimary disc lifetime.
- Demonstrated sustained solid transfer enhances planetary growth, allowing planets to reach several Jupiter masses.
Why it matters
Planet formation in close binary systems is challenging due to disc truncation. This research provides a novel pathway, showing that sustained mass transfer from a circumbinary disc can overcome these limitations. It explains how giant planets can form in systems like γ-Cephei, expanding our understanding of exoplanet diversity.
Original Abstract
Planet formation in close binary systems such as $γ$-Cephei is strongly challenged by the truncation of the circumprimary disc induced by the stellar companion, which limits the available reservoir of gas and solids. Recent hydrodynamical studies suggest that a long-lived circumbinary disc may replenish the circumprimary disc with gas and dust, extending its lifetime and potentially enabling giant planet formation. However, the long-term evolution of such systems under viscous accretion and X-ray photoevaporation, and their coupling with planet formation, remains largely unexplored. We investigate whether sustained mass inflow from a circumbinary reservoir can prolong the lifetime of circumprimary discs and facilitate gas giant formation in $γ$-Cephei-like binaries, even in the presence of strong photoevaporation. Using our code PLANETALP-B, we model the coupled evolution of gas, dust growth, and in-situ planet formation by pebble and gas accretion, including viscous accretion, X-ray photoevaporation, and continuous mass injection. Gas inflow can significantly extend the lifetime of the circumprimary disc, even under strong mass loss. When solids are also transferred, the lifetime of the solid disc increases, enhancing planetary growth. As a result, planets can reach several Jupiter masses, unlike scenarios without mass replenishment. We show that sustained mass transfer from a circumbinary disc can enable giant planet formation in $γ$-Cephei-like binaries, providing a viable pathway to overcome disc truncation, although its applicability to other systems remains to be tested with dedicated hydrodynamical simulations.
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