Planet formation and the early evolution of self-gravitating protoplanetary discs
dc.contributor.advisor
Rice, Ken
dc.contributor.advisor
Biller, Beth
dc.contributor.author
Cadman, James
dc.date.accessioned
2023-01-20T12:15:00Z
dc.date.available
2023-01-20T12:15:00Z
dc.date.issued
2023-01-20
dc.description.abstract
When a Giant Molecular Cloud (GMC) collapses to form a stellar core,
conservation of angular momentum will lead to the formation of a protoplanetary
disc, with an initial mass potentially of the order of its stellar host. If a massive
disc forms, then the disc’s self-gravity will play a crucial role in the earliest
stages of its evolution; driving its viscous evolution, and potentially leading
to the formation of wide orbit, giant planets and brown dwarfs through disc
fragmentation.
I begin this thesis by placing improved constraints on the conditions required
for disc fragmentation, specifically focusing on how the disc’s environment may
influence its evolution and eventual fate.
Recent results from direct imaging surveys suggest that wide orbit giant planets
and brown dwarfs are found more frequently around higher mass stars. I use
Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations to show that a disc’s
susceptibility to fragmentation is dependent on the mass of its host star. I
demonstrate that discs around higher mass stars may fragment for lower disc-to-star mass ratios, making them favourable sites for the formation of wide orbit,
massive objects, such as those found in direct imaging surveys. Low mass stars
may support high mass discs, in principle providing large reservoirs of material
for core accretion planet formation.
Results from direct imaging surveys also find that stars hosting close in giant
planets or brown dwarfs display an excess of outer binary companions, with
indications that some of these objects may have formed through the gravitational
instability (GI). I use SPH to simulate a suite of self-gravitating discs with a
binary companion, and show that there is a narrow region of parameter space
where intermediate separation companions may trigger fragmentation. Short
separation encounters are destructive, whilst wide orbit companions have little effect. The range of binary separations found to favour the formation of short
period, giant planets is consistent with results from direct imaging surveys.
Although numerical models suggest that GI may dominate a disc’s early
evolution, it is still unclear from observations whether massive, self-gravitating
discs exist in nature. Recent high-resolution infrared imaging of protoplanetary
discs have given rise to unparalleled observations of their substructure, including
rings, gaps and spirals, providing us with crucial insights to the earliest stages of
planet formation.
Observations of the protoplanetary disc surrounding AB Aurigae have revealed
the possible presence of two massive planets in the process of forming. The
young measured age for the system places strict time constraints on the planet’s
formation histories. I use analytic core accretion models to show that their
expected core accretion formation timescales are longer than the system’s current
age. Using SPH and viscous evolution models of self-gravitating discs, I show that
a proto-AB Aurigae disc could have been massive enough to fragment in the past,
with typical fragment masses consistent with the masses of the protoplanets which
have been observed in the disc.
Finally, I use Monte Carlo radiative transfer models to generate observational
predictions of self-gravitating discs using ALMA. I develop an existing 3D semi-analytic model to include a prescription for dust trapping in the disc’s spirals. I
make predictions about the disc properties which may drive spirals that could be
visible to ALMA, in particular focusing on the impact of dust trapping. I also
use these models to analyse 3 discs from the DSHARP survey, and discuss the
plausibility of their observed spirals being the result of GI.
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/39742
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/2990
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
Cadman J., Rice K., Hall C., Haworth T. J., Biller B., 2020, Fragmentation favoured in discs around higher mass stars, MNRAS, 492, 5041
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dc.relation.hasversion
Cadman J., Hall C., Fontanive C., Rice K., 2022, Binary companions triggering fragmentation in self-gravitating discs, MNRAS, 511, 457
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dc.relation.hasversion
Cadman J., Rice K., Hall C., 2021, AB Aurigae: Possible evidence of planet formation through the gravitational instability, MNRAS, 504, 2877
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dc.relation.hasversion
Cadman J., Hall C., Rice K., Harries T. J., Klaassen P. D., 2020, The observational impact of dust trapping in self-gravitating discs, MNRAS, 498, 4256
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dc.relation.hasversion
Haworth T. J., Cadman J., Meru F., Hall C., Albertini E., Forgan D., Rice K.,Owen J. E., 2020, Massive discs around low mass stars, MNRAS, 494, 4130-4148
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dc.subject
exoplanets
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dc.subject
planet formation
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dc.subject
astrophysics
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dc.subject
protoplanetary discs
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dc.title
Planet formation and the early evolution of self-gravitating protoplanetary discs
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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