A Numerical Study of Brown Dwarf Formation via Encounters of Protostellar Disks
Sijing Shen (1), James Wadsley (1), Tristen Hayfield (2), Nicholas, Ellens (1) ((1) McMaster University, (2) ETH Z\"urich)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to show that brown dwarfs and other objects can form from proto-stellar disk encounters, with outcomes depending on initial conditions and disk orientations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed numerical analysis of brown dwarf formation through disk encounters, exploring realistic initial conditions and the effects of cooling and orientation.
Findings
Objects from planets to low-mass stars can form during disk encounters.
Retrograde disks are more prone to fragmentation.
Most formed objects are in the brown dwarf mass range and often in multiple systems.
Abstract
The formation of brown dwarfs (BDs) due to the fragmentation of proto-stellar disks undergoing pairwise encounters was investigated. High resolution allowed the use of realistic initial disk models where both the vertical structure and the local Jeans mass were resolved. The results show that objects with masses ranging from giant planets to low mass stars can form during such encounters from initially stable disks. The parameter space of initial spin-orbit orientations and the azimuthal angles for each disk was explored. An upper limit on the initial Toomre Q value of ~2 was found for fragmentation to occur. Depending on the initial configuration, shocks, tidal-tail structures and mass inflows were responsible for the condensation of disk gas. Retrograde disks were generally more likely to fragment. When the interaction timescale was significantly shorter than the disks' dynamical…
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