On the diversity and statistical properties of protostellar discs
Matthew R. Bate

TL;DR
This study uses population synthesis from radiation hydrodynamical simulations to analyze the diversity, evolution, and properties of protostellar discs, revealing their complex dynamics, orientations, and mass distributions in early star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive population synthesis analysis of protostellar discs, highlighting their diversity, evolution, and statistical properties in star cluster formation.
Findings
Protostellar discs show enormous diversity, including misalignments and variable orientations.
Disc masses tend to increase with age and protostellar mass, with sizes growing within 10^4 years.
Disc-to-star mass ratios are typically between 0.1 and 1, decreasing with age.
Abstract
We present results from the first population synthesis study of protostellar discs. We analyse the evolution and properties of a large sample of protostellar discs formed in a radiation hydrodynamical simulation of star cluster formation. Due to the chaotic nature of the star formation process, we find an enormous diversity of young protostellar discs, including misaligned discs, and discs whose orientations vary with time. Star-disc interactions truncate discs and produce multiple systems. Discs may be destroyed in dynamical encounters and/or through ram-pressure stripping, but reform by later gas accretion. We quantify the distributions of disc mass and radii for protostellar ages up to yrs. For low-mass protostars, disc masses tend to increase with both age and protostellar mass. Disc radii range from of order ten to a few hundred au, grow in size on timescales $\le…
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