Stellar multiplicity affects the correlation between proto-planetary disc masses and accretion rates: binaries explain high-accretors in Upper Sco
Francesco Zagaria, Cathie J. Clarke, Giovanni P. Rosotti, Carlo F., Manara

TL;DR
This study investigates how stellar multiplicity influences the correlation between proto-planetary disc masses and accretion rates, revealing binaries often have higher accretion rates and modeling these effects explains observed outliers.
Contribution
It demonstrates that binary companions can explain high accretion rates in low-mass discs and provides coupled gas-dust models of tidally truncated discs that match observations.
Findings
Binaries have systematically higher accretion rates at any disc mass.
Models of tidally truncated discs reproduce most observed data.
Reducing grain coagulation efficiency improves model-data agreement.
Abstract
In recent years a correlation between mass accretion rates onto new-born stars and their proto-planetary disc masses was detected in nearby young star-forming regions. Although such a correlation can be interpreted as due to viscous-diffusion processes in the disc, highly-accreting sources with low disc masses in more evolved regions remain puzzling. In this paper, we hypothesise that the presence of a stellar companion truncating the disc can explain these outliers. Firstly, we searched the literature for information on stellar multiplicity in Lupus, Chamaeleon~I and Upper Sco, finding that roughly 20 per cent of the discs involved in the correlation are in binaries or higher-order multiple stellar systems. We prove with high statistical significance that at any disc mass these sources have systematically higher accretion rates than those in single-stars, with the bulk of the binary…
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