Asteroid flux towards circumprimary habitable zones in binary star systems: I. Statistical Overview
D. Bancelin, E. Pilat-Lohinger, S. Eggl, T.I. Maindl, C. Sch\"afer, R., Speith, R. Dvorak

TL;DR
This study analyzes how binary star systems influence asteroid movement into habitable zones, revealing that a companion star can significantly increase water delivery and asteroid flux, impacting planetary habitability.
Contribution
It provides a statistical comparison of asteroid flux in binary systems, demonstrating the impact of a companion star on water transport to habitable zones.
Findings
Companion stars increase asteroid flux to the habitable zone.
Presence of a companion star can deliver 4-5 times more water.
Binary systems can cause faster depletion of asteroid belts.
Abstract
So far, multiple stellar systems harbor more than 130 extra solar planets. Dynamical simulations show that the outcome of planetary formation process can lead to various planetary architecture (i.e. location, size, mass and water content) when the star system is single or double. In the late phase of planetary formation, when embryo-sized objects dominate the inner region of the system, asteroids are also present and can provide additional material for objects inside the habitable zone (hereafter HZ). In this study, we make a comparison of several binary star systems and their efficiency to move icy asteroids from beyond the snow-line into orbits crossing the HZ. We modeled a belt of 10000 asteroids (remnants from the late phase of planetary formation process) beyond the snow-line. The planetesimals are placed randomly around the primary star and move under the gravitational influence…
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