Literature DB >> 25355359

Possible planet formation in the young, low-mass, multiple stellar system GG Tau A.

Anne Dutrey1, Emmanuel Di Folco1, Stéphane Guilloteau1, Yann Boehler2, Jeff Bary3, Tracy Beck4, Hervé Beust5, Edwige Chapillon6, Fredéric Gueth7, Jean-Marc Huré1, Arnaud Pierens1, Vincent Piétu7, Michal Simon8, Ya-Wen Tang9.   

Abstract

The formation of planets around binary stars may be more difficult than around single stars. In a close binary star (with a separation of less than a hundred astronomical units), theory predicts the presence of circumstellar disks around each star, and an outer circumbinary disk surrounding a gravitationally cleared inner cavity around the stars. Given that the inner disks are depleted by accretion onto the stars on timescales of a few thousand years, any replenishing material must be transferred from the outer reservoir to fuel planet formation (which occurs on timescales of about one million years). Gas flowing through disk cavities has been detected in single star systems. A circumbinary disk was discovered around the young low-mass binary system GG Tau A (ref. 7), which has recently been shown to be a hierarchical triple system. It has one large inner disk around the single star, GG Tau Aa, and shows small amounts of shocked hydrogen gas residing within the central cavity, but other than a single weak detection, the distribution of cold gas in this cavity or in any other binary or multiple star system has not hitherto been determined. Here we report imaging of gas fragments emitting radiation characteristic of carbon monoxide within the GG Tau A cavity. From the kinematics we conclude that the flow appears capable of sustaining the inner disk (around GG Tau Aa) beyond the accretion lifetime, leaving time for planet formation to occur there. These results show the complexity of planet formation around multiple stars and confirm the general picture predicted by numerical simulations.

Entities:  

Year:  2014        PMID: 25355359     DOI: 10.1038/nature13822

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  2 in total

1.  A major asymmetric dust trap in a transition disk.

Authors:  Nienke van der Marel; Ewine F van Dishoeck; Simon Bruderer; Til Birnstiel; Paola Pinilla; Cornelis P Dullemond; Tim A van Kempen; Markus Schmalzl; Joanna M Brown; Gregory J Herczeg; Geoffrey S Mathews; Vincent Geers
Journal:  Science       Date:  2013-06-07       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  Flows of gas through a protoplanetary gap.

Authors:  Simon Casassus; Gerrit van der Plas; M Sebastian Perez; William R F Dent; Ed Fomalont; Janis Hagelberg; Antonio Hales; Andrés Jordán; Dimitri Mawet; Francois Ménard; Al Wootten; David Wilner; A Meredith Hughes; Matthias R Schreiber; Julien H Girard; Barbara Ercolano; Hector Canovas; Pablo E Román; Vachail Salinas
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2013-01-02       Impact factor: 49.962

  2 in total
  1 in total

1.  Gas Accretion within the Dust Cavity in AB Aur.

Authors:  Pablo Rivière-Marichalar; Asunción Fuente; Clément Baruteau; Roberto Neri; Sandra P Treviño-Morales; Andrés Carmona; Marcelino Agúndez; Rafael Bachiller
Journal:  Astrophys J Lett       Date:  2019-07-02       Impact factor: 7.413

  1 in total

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