The Role of Multiplicity in Disk Evolution and Planet Formation
Adam L. Kraus (Univ. of Hawaii - IfA), Michael J. Ireland (Macquarie, University), Lynne A. Hillenbrand (California Institute of Technology),, Frantz Martinache (National Astronomical Observatory of Japan)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how binary star companions influence protoplanetary disk evolution and the implications for giant planet formation, revealing that close binaries hasten disk dispersal and affect planet formation timescales.
Contribution
It provides new observational constraints on disk dispersal timescales in binary systems and discusses their impact on giant planet formation scenarios.
Findings
Close binaries (<40 AU) disperse disks within <1 Myr
Most single stars retain disks for 3-5 Myr
Giant planet formation in close binaries must occur within <1 Myr
Abstract
The past decade has seen a revolution in our understanding of protoplanetary disk evolution and planet formation in single star systems. However, the majority of solar-type stars form in binary systems, so the impact of binary companions on protoplanetary disks is an important element in our understanding of planet formation. We have compiled a combined multiplicity/disk census of Taurus-Auriga, plus a restricted sample of close binaries in other regions, in order to explore the role of multiplicity in disk evolution. Our results imply that the tidal influence of a close (<40 AU) binary companion significantly hastens the process of protoplanetary disk dispersal, as ~2/3 of all close binaries promptly disperse their disks within <1 Myr after formation. However, prompt disk dispersal only occurs for a small fraction of wide binaries and single stars, with ~80%-90% retaining their disks…
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