Population Synthesis Models Indicate a Need for Early and Ubiquitous Disk Substructures
Luca Delussu, Tilman Birnstiel, Anna Miotello, Paola Pinilla, Giovanni, Rosotti, Sean M. Andrews

TL;DR
Population synthesis modeling suggests that early, widespread disk substructures are necessary to explain observed properties of planet-forming disks, indicating that most disks likely contain unresolved substructures from early stages.
Contribution
This study introduces a population synthesis model demonstrating that early, significant disk substructures are essential to match observed disk properties, advancing understanding of disk evolution.
Findings
Disks with early, strong substructures best reproduce observations.
High initial disk masses and moderate turbulence levels are consistent with data.
Most smooth disks probably contain unresolved substructures.
Abstract
Large mm surveys of star forming regions enable the study of entire populations of planet-forming disks and reveal correlations between their observable properties. Population studies of disks have shown that the correlation between disk size and millimeter flux could be explained either through disks with strong substructure, or alternatively by the effects of radial inward drift of growing dust particles. This study aims to constrain the parameters and initial conditions of planet-forming disks and address the question of the need for the presence of substructures in disks and, if needed, their predicted characteristics, based on the large samples of disk sizes, millimeter fluxes, and spectral indices available. We performed a population synthesis of the continuum emission of disks, exploiting a two-population model (two-pop-py), considering the influence of viscous evolution, dust…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSimulation Techniques and Applications
