TL;DR
This paper investigates the fragmentation process of self-gravitating discs using high-resolution 3D simulations, revealing a smooth transition between fragmented and unfragmented states and proposing a two-step gravitational cascade mechanism.
Contribution
It introduces a novel two-step gravitational cascade model for disc fragmentation and provides high-resolution simulation evidence supporting a continuous transition between regimes.
Findings
Critical cooling timescale $eta$ aligns with previous studies.
No strict boundary between fragmentation and stability, but a smooth transition.
Power-law slope of the column density PDF scales with $eta$.
Abstract
Self-gravitating discs are believed to play an important role in astrophysics in particular regarding the star and planet formation process. In this context, discs subject to an idealized cooling process, characterized by a cooling timescale expressed in unit of orbital timescale, have been extensively studied. We take advantage of the Riemann solver and the 3D Godunov scheme implemented in the code Ramses to perform high resolution simulations, complementing previous studies that have used smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) or 2D grid codes. We observe that the critical value of for which the disc fragments is consistent with most previous results, and is not well converged with resolution. By studying the probability density function of the fluctuations of the column density (-PDF), we argue that there is no strict separation between the fragmented and the…
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