Protoplanetary disc evolution and dispersal: the implications of X-ray photoevaportion
James E. Owen, Barbara Ercolano, Cathie J. Clarke

TL;DR
This study investigates how X-ray photoevaporation influences the evolution and dispersal of protoplanetary discs, demonstrating that X-ray luminosity significantly affects wind rates and disc lifetimes, aligning with observed data.
Contribution
The paper introduces a coupled radiation-hydrodynamic and viscous evolution model showing X-ray photoevaporation's key role in disc dispersal and explaining diverse transition disc observations.
Findings
X-ray luminosity scales linearly with wind rates.
Model matches observed disc lifetimes and accretion rates.
Explains diverse transition disc properties.
Abstract
(Abridged) We explore the role of X-ray photoevaporation in the evolution and dispersal of viscously evolving T-Tauri discs. We show that the X-ray photoevaporation wind rates scale linearly with X-ray luminosity, such that the observed range of X-ray luminosities for solar-type T-Tauri stars (10e28-10e31 erg\s) gives rise to vigorous disc winds with rates of order 10e-10-10e-7 M_sun/yr. We use the wind solutions from radiation-hydrodynamic models, coupled to a viscous evolution model to construct a population synthesis model so that we may study the physical properties of evolving discs and so-called `transition discs'. Current observations of disc lifetimes and accretion rates can be matched by our model assuming a viscosity parameter alpha = 2.5e-3. Our models confirm that X-rays play a dominant role in the evolution and dispersal of protoplanetary discs giving rise to the observed…
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