Deuterium Burning in Massive Giant Planets and Low-Mass Brown Dwarfs formed by Core-Nucleated Accretion
Peter Bodenheimer, Gennaro D'Angelo, Jack J. Lissauer, Jonathan J., Fortney, and Didier Saumon

TL;DR
This study uses detailed simulations to determine the deuterium-burning mass limit in giant planets and brown dwarfs formed via core-nucleated accretion, showing it to be around 12-14 Jupiter masses, largely independent of formation parameters.
Contribution
It provides a formation-based calculation of the deuterium-burning threshold, refining previous estimates by including formation history and core properties.
Findings
Deuterium-burning mass limit (M50) is 11.6-13.6 Mjup.
Formation parameters have minimal impact on M50.
Objects above M50 show significant luminosity increase during deuterium burning.
Abstract
Formation of bodies near the deuterium-burning limit is considered by detailed numerical simulations according to the core-nucleated giant planet accretion scenario. The objects, with heavy-element cores in the range 5-30 Mearth, are assumed to accrete gas up to final masses of 10-15 Jupiter masses (Mjup). After the formation process, which lasts 1-5 Myr and which ends with a 'cold-start', low-entropy configuration, the bodies evolve at constant mass up to an age of several Gyr. Deuterium burning via proton capture is included in the calculation, and we determined the mass, M50, above which more than 50% of the initial deuterium is burned. This often-quoted borderline between giant planets and brown dwarfs is found to depend only slightly on parameters, such as core mass, stellar mass, formation location, solid surface density in the protoplanetary disk, disk viscosity, and dust…
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