The properties of brown dwarfs and low-mass hydrogen-burning stars formed by disc fragmentation
Dimitris Stamatellos, Anthony P. Whitworth (School of Physics &, Astronomy, Cardiff University)

TL;DR
This study uses radiation-hydrodynamic simulations to show that disc fragmentation around Sun-like stars can produce brown dwarfs, planetary-mass objects, and low-mass hydrogen-burning stars, explaining their observed properties and distributions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that disc fragmentation is a robust mechanism for forming low-mass stars and brown dwarfs, matching observed statistical properties and distributions.
Findings
Disc fragments within a few thousand years producing BDs and PM stars.
Most PM stars and BDs are ejected by mutual interactions.
A BD desert extends to at least ~100 AU due to formation and scattering processes.
Abstract
We suggest that a high proportion of brown dwarfs are formed by gravitational fragmentation of massive extended discs around Sun-like stars. Such discs should arise frequently, but should be observed infrequently, precisely because they fragment rapidly. By performing an ensemble of radiation-hydrodynamic simulations, we show that such discs fragment within a few thousand years, and produce mainlybrown dwarf (BDs) stars, but also planetary mass (PM) stars and very low-mass hydrogen-burning (HB) stars. Most of the the PM stars and BDs are ejected by mutual interactions. We analyse the statistical properties of these stars, and compare them with observations. After a few hundred thousand years the Sun-like primary is typically left with a close low-mass HB companion, and two much wider companions: a low-mass HB star and a BD star, or a BD-BD binary. There is a BD desert extending out to…
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