Protostellar disk instabilities and the formation of substellar companions

被引:31
|
作者
Pickett, BK [1 ]
Durisen, RH
Cassen, P
Mejia, AC
机构
[1] Valparaiso Univ, Neils Sci Ctr, Dept Phys & Astron, Valparaiso, IN 46383 USA
[2] Indiana Univ, Dept Astron, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA
[3] NASA, Ames Res Ctr, Moffett Field, CA 95035 USA
来源
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL | 2000年 / 540卷 / 02期
基金
美国国家航空航天局;
关键词
hydrodynamics; instabilities; solar system : formation; stars : formation;
D O I
10.1086/312884
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
Recent numerical simulations of self-gravitating protostellar disks have suggested that gravitational instabilities can lead to the production of substellar companions. In these simulations, the disk is typically assumed to be locally isothermal; i.e., the initial, axisymmetric temperature in the disk remains everywhere unchanged. Such an idealized condition implies extremely efficient cooling for outwardly moving parcels of gas. While we have seen disk disruption in our own locally isothermal simulations of a small, massive protostellar disk, no long-lived companions formed as a result of the instabilities. Instead, thermal and tidal effects and the complex interactions of the disk material prevented permanent condensations from forming, despite the vigorous growth of spiral instabilities. In order to compare our results more directly with those of other authors, we here present three-dimensional evolutions of an older, larger, but less massive protostellar disk. We show that potentially long-lived condensations form only for the extreme of local isothermality, and then only when severe restrictions are placed on the natural tendency of the protostellar disk to expand in response to gravitational instabilities. A more realistic adiabatic evolution leads to vertical and radial expansion of the disk but no clump formation. We conclude that isothermal disk calculations cannot demonstrate companion formation by disk fragmentation but only suggest it at best. It will be necessary in future numerical work on this problem to treat the disk thermodynamics more realistically.
引用
收藏
页码:L95 / L98
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Self-gravitating magnetically supported protostellar disks and the formation of substellar companions
    Li, ZY
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2002, 574 (02): : L159 - L162
  • [2] Substellar Companions and the Formation of Hot Subdwarf Stars
    Geier, Stephan
    Heber, Ulrich
    Tillich, Alfred
    Hirsch, Heiko
    Kupfer, Thomas
    Schaffenroth, Veronika
    Classen, Lew
    Maxted, Pierre F. L.
    Ostensen, Roy H.
    Barlow, Brad N.
    Marsh, Tom R.
    Gaensicke, Boris T.
    Napiwotzki, Ralf
    O'Toole, Simon J.
    Guenther, Eike W.
    PLANETARY SYSTEMS BEYOND THE MAIN SEQUENCE, 2011, 1331 : 163 - +
  • [3] Substellar companions and isolated planetary-mass objects from protostellar disc fragmentation
    Rice, WKM
    Armitage, PJ
    Bonnell, IA
    Bate, MR
    Jeffers, SV
    Vine, SG
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2003, 346 (03) : L36 - L40
  • [4] The formation of substellar objects induced by the collision of protostellar disks
    Lin, DNC
    Laughlin, G
    Bodenheimer, P
    Rózyczka, M
    SCIENCE, 1998, 281 (5385) : 2025 - 2027
  • [5] Theory of Protostellar Disk Formation
    Li, Zhi-Yun
    Krasnopolsky, Ruben
    Shang, Hsien
    FROM INTERSTELLAR CLOUDS TO STAR-FORMING GALAXIES: UNIVERSAL PROCESSES?, 2015, (315): : 118 - 125
  • [6] A Spitzer IRAC search for substellar companions of the debris disk star ε Eridani
    Marengo, M.
    Megeath, S. T.
    Fazio, G. G.
    Stapelfeldt, K. R.
    Werner, M. W.
    Backman, D. E.
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2006, 647 (02): : 1437 - 1451
  • [7] Protostellar Disk Formation Traced by Chemistry
    Sakai, Nami
    REVOLUTION IN ASTRONOMY WITH ALMA: THE THIRD YEAR, 2015, 499 : 199 - 204
  • [8] Protostellar disk formation and early evolution
    Adams, FC
    Laughlin, G
    SPACE SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2000, 92 (1-2) : 23 - 38
  • [9] Protostellar Disk Formation and Early Evolution
    Fred C. Adams
    Gregory Laughlin
    Space Science Reviews, 2000, 92 : 23 - 38
  • [10] Protostellar collapse: rotation and disk formation
    Tscharnuter, W. M.
    Schoenke, J.
    Gail, H. -P.
    Trieloff, M.
    Luettjohann, E.
    ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2009, 504 (01): : 109 - 113