The response of self‐gravitating protostellar discs to slow reduction in cooling time‐scale: the fragmentation boundary revisited

A number of previous studies of the fragmentation of self‐gravitating protostellar discs have involved suites of simulations in which radiative cooling is modelled in terms of a cooling time‐scale (tcool) which is parametrized as a simple multiple (βcool) of the local dynamical time‐scale. Such stud...

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Published inMonthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Vol. 381; no. 4; pp. 1543 - 1547
Main Authors Clarke, C. J., Harper‐Clark, E., Lodato, G.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 11.11.2007
Blackwell Science
Oxford University Press
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Summary:A number of previous studies of the fragmentation of self‐gravitating protostellar discs have involved suites of simulations in which radiative cooling is modelled in terms of a cooling time‐scale (tcool) which is parametrized as a simple multiple (βcool) of the local dynamical time‐scale. Such studies have delineated the ‘fragmentation boundary’ in terms of a critical value of βcool(βcrit) such that the disc fragments if βcool < βcrit. Such an approach however begs the question of how in reality a disc could ever be assembled in a state with βcool < βcrit. Here we adopt the more realistic approach of effecting a gradual reduction in βcool, as might correspond to changes in thermal regime due to secular changes in the disc density profile. We find that the effect of gradually reducing βcool (on a time‐scale longer than tcool) is to stabilize the disc against fragmentation, compared with models in which βcool is reduced rapidly (over less than tcool). We therefore conclude that the ability of a disc to remain in a self‐regulated, self‐gravitating state (without fragmentation) is partly dependent on the disc's thermal history, as well as its current cooling rate. Nevertheless, the effect of a slow reduction in tcool appears only to lower the fragmentation boundary by about a factor of 2 in tcool and thus only permits maximum ‘α’ values (which parametrize the efficiency of angular momentum transfer in the disc) that are about a factor of 2 higher than determined hitherto. Our results therefore do not undermine the notion that there is a fundamental upper limit to the heating rate that can be delivered by gravitational instabilities before the disc is subject to fragmentation. An important implication of this work, therefore, is that self‐gravitating discs can enter into the regime of fragmentation via secular evolution and it is not necessary to invoke rapid (impulsive) events to trigger fragmentation.
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ISSN:0035-8711
1365-2966
DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2007.12322.x