Strong effect of the cluster environment on the size of protoplanetary discs?
Kirsten Vincke, Andreas Breslau, Susanne Pfalzner

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that stellar encounters in clusters significantly truncate protoplanetary discs, with denser environments leading to more pronounced size reductions, impacting planet formation potential.
Contribution
The paper quantifies how stellar cluster environments influence protoplanetary disc sizes, highlighting the importance of stellar encounters in disc evolution across different cluster densities.
Findings
A large fraction of discs are significantly reduced in size in various cluster environments.
In ONC-like clusters, 65% of discs are smaller than 1000 AU after 5 Myr.
Denser clusters show even higher fractions of truncated discs, up to 84%.
Abstract
Context. Most stars are born in clusters, thus the protoplanetary discs surrounding the newly formed stars might be influenced by this environment. Isolated star-disc encounters have previously been studied, and it was shown that very close encounters are necessary to completely destroy discs. However, relatively distant encounters are still able to change the disc size considerably. Aims. We quantify the importance of disc-size reduction that is due to stellar encounters in an entire stellar population. Methods. We modelled young, massive clusters of different densities using the code Nbody6 to determine the statistics of stellar encounter parameters. In a second step, we used these parameters to investigate the effect of the environments on the disc size. For this purpose, we performed a numerical experiment with an artificial initial disc size of 105 AU. Results. We quantify to which…
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