Wataru Ooyama, Riouhei Nakatani, Takashi Hosokawa, Hiroto Mitani and Neal J. Turner
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摘要

一般认为原行星盘(PPDs)会在几百万年内消散,但最近的观测发现,在其更古老的对应物--碎片盘中存在气体。这些气体的来源仍不确定,其中一种可能是原行星盘的存活时间出乎意料地长(原始起源设想)。为了探索这种假设的合理性,我们进行了一维磁盘演化模拟,改变恒星质量、磁盘质量、湍流应力和磁流体动力风模型等参数,同时结合恒星演化来考虑随时间变化的光蒸发率。我们的研究重点是小颗粒耗尽的星盘,因为由于远紫外光蒸发的减少,这些小颗粒的寿命可能较长。我们的研究结果表明,无论恒星质量如何,只要这些星盘中的气体最初质量较大(Mdisk ≈ 0.1 M*),湍流应力相对较弱(α ≪ 10-2),它们的寿命就能超过 10 Myr。在很宽的参数空间内,M* = 2 M⊙的寿命最长,气体通常持续存在于 ∼10-103 au。粗略估计的这些盘的CO质量与观测到的早期A星周围质量最大的富含气体的碎片盘的质量相符。这些吻合支持了原始起源假设的合理性。此外,根据我们的模型预测,只要磁盘还存在,吸积就会一直持续,这就可以解释在低质量恒星寄存的旧磁盘(包括彼得潘磁盘)中探测到的吸积特征。我们的发现还表明,富含气体的碎片盘可能存在持续吸积现象。因此,寻找吸积特征可能是确定碎片盘中气体来源的关键。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Secret of Longevity: Protoplanetary Disks as a Source of Gas in Debris Disks
While protoplanetary disks (PPDs) are generally thought to disperse within several million years, recent observations have revealed gas in their older counterparts, debris disks. The origin of this gas remains uncertain, with one possibility being the unexpectedly long survival of PPDs (the primordial-origin scenario). To explore the plausibility of this scenario, we conduct 1D disk evolution simulations, varying parameters like stellar mass, disk mass, turbulent stress, and the model of magnetohydrodynamic winds, while incorporating stellar evolution to account for time-varying photoevaporation rates. Our focus is on disks where small grains are depleted, as these are potentially long lived due to reduced far-ultraviolet photoevaporation. Our results show that gas in these disks can survive beyond 10 Myr regardless of the stellar mass, provided they are initially massive (Mdisk ≈ 0.1 M*) with relatively weak turbulent stress (α ≪ 10−2). The longest lifetimes are consistently found for M* = 2 M⊙ across a wide parameter space, with gas typically persisting at ∼10–103 au. Roughly estimated CO masses for these disks fall within the observed range for the most massive gas-rich debris disks around early A stars. These alignments support the plausibility of the primordial-origin scenario. Additionally, our model predicts that accretion persists for as long as the disk survives, which could explain the accretion signatures detected in old disks hosted by low-mass stars, including Peter Pan disks. Our finding also suggests that ongoing accretion may exist in gas-rich debris disks. Thus, searching for accretion signatures could be a key to determining the origins of gas in debris disks.
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