Binary companions triggering fragmentation in self-gravitating discs
James Cadman, Cassandra Hall, Cl\'emence Fontanive, Ken Rice

TL;DR
This study uses 3D SPH simulations to identify how intermediate separation binary companions can induce fragmentation in self-gravitating discs, potentially explaining the formation of close-in giant planets and brown dwarfs.
Contribution
It reveals a specific binary separation range where companions trigger disc fragmentation, advancing understanding of binary influence on substellar object formation.
Findings
Intermediate binary separations (100-400 AU) can induce disc fragmentation.
High eccentricity or very close binaries inhibit fragmentation.
Wide binaries (>500 AU) have minimal impact on disc stability.
Abstract
Observations of systems hosting close in ( AU) giant planets and brown dwarfs ( M) find an excess of binary star companions, indicating that stellar multiplicity may play an important role in their formation. There is now increasing evidence that some of these objects may have formed via fragmentation in gravitationally unstable discs. We present a suite of 3D smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations of binary star systems with circumprimary self-gravitating discs, which include a realistic approximation to radiation transport, and extensively explore the companion's orbital parameter space for configurations which may trigger fragmentation. We identify a "sweet spot" where intermediate separation binary companions ( AU AU) can cause a marginally stable disc to fragment. The exact range of ideal binary separations is a…
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