Young stars show evidence of accretion discs which evolve quickly and disperse with an e-folding time of similar to 3 Myr. This is in striking contrast with recent observations that suggest evidence of numerous >30 Myr old stars with an accretion disc in large star-forming complexes. We consider whether these observations of apparently old accretors could be explained by invoking Bondi-Hoyle accretion to rebuild a new disc around these stars during passage through a clumpy molecular cloud. We combine a simple Monte Carlo model to explore the capture of mass by such systems with a viscous evolution model to infer the levels of accretion that would be observed. We find that a significant fraction of stars may capture enough material via the Bondi-Hoyle mechanism to rebuild a disc of mass greater than or similar to 1 minimum-mass solar nebula, and less than or similar to 10% accrete at observable levels at any given time. A significant fraction of the observed old accretors may be explained with our proposed mechanism. Such accretion may provide a chance for a second epoch of planet formation, and have unpredictable consequences for planetary evolution.
Scicluna, P., Rosotti, G., Dale, J.E., Testi, L. (2014). Old pre-main-sequence stars Disc reformation by Bondi-Hoyle accretion. ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 566, 3-6 [10.1051/0004-6361/201423654].
Old pre-main-sequence stars Disc reformation by Bondi-Hoyle accretion
Testi, L
2014
Abstract
Young stars show evidence of accretion discs which evolve quickly and disperse with an e-folding time of similar to 3 Myr. This is in striking contrast with recent observations that suggest evidence of numerous >30 Myr old stars with an accretion disc in large star-forming complexes. We consider whether these observations of apparently old accretors could be explained by invoking Bondi-Hoyle accretion to rebuild a new disc around these stars during passage through a clumpy molecular cloud. We combine a simple Monte Carlo model to explore the capture of mass by such systems with a viscous evolution model to infer the levels of accretion that would be observed. We find that a significant fraction of stars may capture enough material via the Bondi-Hoyle mechanism to rebuild a disc of mass greater than or similar to 1 minimum-mass solar nebula, and less than or similar to 10% accrete at observable levels at any given time. A significant fraction of the observed old accretors may be explained with our proposed mechanism. Such accretion may provide a chance for a second epoch of planet formation, and have unpredictable consequences for planetary evolution.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.