Have proto-planetary discs formed planets?
J.S. Greaves, W.K.M. Rice

TL;DR
This study confirms that most Class II T Tauri star discs lack sufficient mass to form gas giants via core accretion, suggesting planet formation occurs earlier, during the Class 0/I stages, or involves unseen mass.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that millimetre-detectable dust in Class II discs is insufficient for planet formation, and explores alternative solutions involving earlier stages or different mechanisms.
Findings
Few percent of young stars have enough disc mass for gas giant formation.
Higher incidence of massive discs in Class 0/I stages supports early planet formation.
Gravitational instability unlikely to form gas giants inside 50 AU in massive discs.
Abstract
It has recently been noted that many discs around T Tauri stars appear to comprise only a few Jupiter-masses of gas and dust. Using millimetre surveys of discs within six local star-formation regions, we confirm this result, and find that only a few percent of young stars have enough circumstellar material to build gas giant planets, in standard core accretion models. Since the frequency of observed exo-planets is greater than this, there is a `missing mass' problem. As alternatives to simply adjusting the conversion of dust-flux to disc mass, we investigate three other classes of solution. Migration of planets could hypothetically sweep up the disc mass reservoir more efficiently, but trends in multi-planet systems do not support such a model, and theoretical models suggest that the gas accretion timescale is too short for migration to sweep the disc. Enhanced inner-disc mass…
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