Modelling circumbinary protoplanetary disks: I. Fluid simulations of the Kepler-16 and 34 systems
S. Lines, Z. M. Leinhardt, C. Baruteau, S.-J. Paardekooper, P. J., Carter

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to analyze how various parameters affect the structure and evolution of circumbinary protoplanetary disks around Kepler-16 and Kepler-34, providing insights into planet formation conditions.
Contribution
It is the first detailed hydrodynamical simulation study exploring the effects of binary type, viscosity, aspect-ratio, and self-gravity on circumbinary disk dynamics.
Findings
Binary type strongly influences disk eccentricity.
Aspect-ratio significantly affects disk eccentricity.
Self-gravity has minimal impact on low-mass disks.
Abstract
The Kepler mission's discovery of a number of circumbinary planets orbiting close (a_p < 1.1 au) to the stellar binary raises questions as to how these planets could have formed given the intense gravitational perturbations the dual stars impart on the disk. The gas component of circumbinary protoplanetary disks is perturbed in a similar manner to the solid, planetesimal dominated counterpart, although the mechanism by which disk eccentricity originates differs. This is the first work of a series that aims to investigate the conditions for planet formation in circumbinary protoplanetary disks. We present a number of hydrodynamical simulations that explore the response of gas disks around two observed binary systems: Kepler-16 and Kepler-34. We probe the importance of disk viscosity, aspect-ratio, inner boundary condition, initial surface density gradient, and self-gravity on the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
