Planet formation around M dwarfs via disc instability: Fragmentation conditions and protoplanet properties
Anthony Mercer, Dimitris Stamatellos

TL;DR
This study investigates the conditions under which disc instability can lead to gas giant planet formation around M dwarf stars, highlighting the importance of disc mass ratios and initial planetary properties.
Contribution
It provides hydrodynamic simulation results identifying minimum disc mass ratios and initial planet characteristics for disc fragmentation around M dwarfs, advancing understanding of planet formation mechanisms.
Findings
Disc-to-star mass ratio of 0.3 to 0.6 is needed for fragmentation.
Protoplanets form rapidly at around 50 AU with high initial temperatures.
Metallicity has limited impact on fragmentation but high metallicity may suppress it.
Abstract
Context: Around 30 per cent of the observed exoplanets that orbit M dwarf stars are gas giants that are more massive than Jupiter. These planets are prime candidates for formation by disc instability. Aims: We want to determine the conditions for disc fragmentation around M dwarfs and the properties of the planets that are formed by disc instability. Methods: We performed hydrodynamic simulations of M dwarf protostellar discs in order to determine the minimum disc mass required for gravitational fragmentation to occur. Different stellar masses, disc radii, and metallicities were considered. The mass of each protostellar disc was steadily increased until the disc fragmented and a protoplanet was formed. Results: We find that a disc-to-star mass ratio between and is required for fragmentation to happen. The minimum mass at which a disc fragments increases with the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
