Evolution of the Accretion Rate of Young Intermediate Mass Stars: Implications for Disk Evolution and Planet Formation
Sean D. Brittain, Joshua W. Kern, Gwendolyn Meeus, and Rene D. Oudmaijer

TL;DR
This study investigates how accretion rates in intermediate-mass young stars evolve, revealing an increase contrary to traditional models, driven by stellar temperature rise and FUV radiation, impacting disk evolution and planet formation understanding.
Contribution
It introduces a new scenario linking stellar temperature increase to higher accretion rates, challenging canonical disk evolution models for intermediate-mass stars.
Findings
Accretion rate increases from IMTTSs to Herbig stars.
FUV radiation rise correlates with higher accretion.
Implications for disk lifetime and planet formation.
Abstract
This work presents a study of the evolution of the stellar accretion rates of pre-main-sequence intermediate-mass stars. We compare the accretion rate of the younger intermediate-mass T Tauri stars (IMTTSs) with the older Herbig stars into which they evolve. We find that the median accretion rate of IMTTSs (1.210 M yr) is significantly lower than that of Herbig stars (1.910 M yr). This increase stands in stark contrast with canonical models of disk evolution that predict that the stellar accretion rate declines with age. We put forward a physically plausible scenario that accounts for the systematic increase of stellar accretion based on the increase of the effective temperature of the stars as they evolve towards the zero-age main sequence. For example, the temperature of a 2M star will increase from 4900~K in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
