Habitable planet formation around low-mass stars: Rapid accretion, rapid debris removal and the essential contribution of external giants
Matthew S. Clement, Elisa V. Quintana, Billy L. Quarles

TL;DR
This paper investigates the formation and volatile delivery processes of habitable planets around low-mass stars, emphasizing rapid debris removal, the role of external giant planets, and implications for planetary habitability.
Contribution
It provides new simulations of in-situ planet formation around low-mass stars and analyzes the impact of external giant planets on volatile delivery and debris dynamics.
Findings
Debris near habitable zones is rapidly removed, reducing volatile delivery.
External giant planets can perturb icy bodies, potentially delivering volatiles to habitable planets.
Giant planets also hinder the implantation of asteroids during planet formation.
Abstract
In recent years a paradigm shift has occurred in exoplanet science, wherein low-mass stars are increasingly viewed as a foundational pillar of the search for potentially habitable worlds in the solar neighborhood. However, the formation processes of this rapidly accumulating sample of planet systems are still poorly understood. Moreover, it is unclear whether tenuous primordial atmospheres around these Earth-analogs could have survived the intense epoch of heightened stellar activity that is typical for low-mass stars. We present new simulations of in-situ planet formation across the M-dwarf mass spectrum, and derive leftover debris populations of small bodies that might source delayed volatile delivery. We then follow the evolution of this debris with high-resolution models of real systems of habitable zone planets around low-mass stars such as TRAPPIST-1, Proxima Centauri and TOI-700.…
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