We study the mutual evolution of the orbital properties of high-mass ratio, circular, co-planar binaries and their surrounding discs, using 3D Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics simulations. We investigate the evolution of binary and disc eccentricity, cavity structure, and the formation of orbiting azimuthal overdense features in the disc. Even with circular initial conditions, all discs with mass ratios q > 0.05 develop eccentricity. We find that disc eccentricity grows abruptly after a relatively long time-scale (∼400-700 binary orbits), and is associated with a very small increase in the binary eccentricity. When disc eccentricity grows, the cavity semimajor axis reaches values acav ≈ 3.5 abin. We also find that the disc eccentricity correlates linearly with the cavity size. Viscosity and orbit crossing appear to be responsible for halting the disc eccentricity growth - eccentricity at the cavity edge in the range ecav ∼ 0.05-0.35. Our analysis shows that the current theoretical framework cannot fully explain the origin of these evolutionary features when the binary is almost circular (ebin ≲ 0.01); we speculate about alternative explanations. As previously observed, we find that the disc develops an azimuthal overdense feature in Keplerian motion at the edge of the cavity. A low-contrast overdensity still co-moves with the flow after 2000 binary orbits; such an overdensity can in principle cause significant dust trapping, with important consequences for protoplanetary disc observations.

The evolution of large cavities and disc eccentricity in circumbinary discs / E. Ragusa, R. Alexander, J. Calcino, K. Hirsh, D.J. Price. - In: MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. - ISSN 0035-8711. - 499:3(2020), pp. 3362-3380. [10.1093/mnras/staa2954]

The evolution of large cavities and disc eccentricity in circumbinary discs

E. Ragusa;
2020

Abstract

We study the mutual evolution of the orbital properties of high-mass ratio, circular, co-planar binaries and their surrounding discs, using 3D Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics simulations. We investigate the evolution of binary and disc eccentricity, cavity structure, and the formation of orbiting azimuthal overdense features in the disc. Even with circular initial conditions, all discs with mass ratios q > 0.05 develop eccentricity. We find that disc eccentricity grows abruptly after a relatively long time-scale (∼400-700 binary orbits), and is associated with a very small increase in the binary eccentricity. When disc eccentricity grows, the cavity semimajor axis reaches values acav ≈ 3.5 abin. We also find that the disc eccentricity correlates linearly with the cavity size. Viscosity and orbit crossing appear to be responsible for halting the disc eccentricity growth - eccentricity at the cavity edge in the range ecav ∼ 0.05-0.35. Our analysis shows that the current theoretical framework cannot fully explain the origin of these evolutionary features when the binary is almost circular (ebin ≲ 0.01); we speculate about alternative explanations. As previously observed, we find that the disc develops an azimuthal overdense feature in Keplerian motion at the edge of the cavity. A low-contrast overdensity still co-moves with the flow after 2000 binary orbits; such an overdensity can in principle cause significant dust trapping, with important consequences for protoplanetary disc observations.
Accretion discs; Binaries; Hydrodynamics; Planet-disc interactions; Protoplanetary discs
Settore PHYS-05/A - Astrofisica, cosmologia e scienza dello spazio
   Building planetary systems: linking architectures with formation
   BuildingPlanS
   European Commission
   Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
   681601

   Dust and gas in planet forming discs (DUSTBUSTER)
   DUSTBUSTER
   EUROPEAN COMMISSION
   H2020
   823823

   DiRAC2: 100 Tflop/s HPC cluster procurement
   UK Research and Innovation
   STFC
   ST/K000373/1

   The DiRAC 2.5x Facility
   UK Research and Innovation
   STFC
   ST/R002363/1

   DiRAC 2.5 Operations 2017-2020
   UK Research and Innovation
   STFC
   ST/R001014/1
2020
25-set-2020
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1183836
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