On the time evolution of the $M_{\rm d} - M_\star$ and $\dot M - M_\star$ correlations for protoplanetary discs: the viscous timescale increases with stellar mass
Alice Somigliana, Claudia Toci, Giovanni Rosotti, Giuseppe Lodato,, Marco Tazzari, Carlo Manara, Leonardo Testi, Federico Lepri

TL;DR
This paper investigates how viscous evolution influences the correlations between disc mass, accretion rate, and stellar mass in protoplanetary discs, revealing that initial conditions and a positive correlation between viscous timescale and stellar mass shape their evolution.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical framework and numerical simulations showing how viscous evolution enforces equal slopes in key correlations and explains their observed increase over time.
Findings
Viscous evolution aligns the slopes of $M_d$ and $\dot M$ correlations over time.
A positive correlation between viscous timescale and stellar mass explains the increasing trend.
Numerical simulations agree with analytical predictions and constrain initial conditions.
Abstract
Large surveys of star-forming regions have unveiled power-law correlations between the stellar mass and the disc parameters, such as the disc mass and the accretion rate . The observed slopes appear to be increasing with time, but the reason behind the establishment of these correlations and their subsequent evolution is still uncertain. We conduct a theoretical analysis of the impact of viscous evolution on power-law initial conditions for a population of protoplanetary discs. We find that, for evolved populations, viscous evolution enforces the two correlations to have the same slope, = , and that this limit is uniquely determined by the initial slopes and . We recover the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
