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Encounters of Protostellar Disks and Formation of Substellar Objects

<p> Fragmentation during encounters between protostellar disks provides a possible scenario for the formation of substellar objects such as brown dwarfs and planets. A series of simulations of protostellar disk encounters were performed to investigate the fragmentation under different encounter parameters, and to characterize the properties of any resultant fragments. It was found that the initial disk minimum Toomre Q must satisfy Qini ;S 1.1 for the fragmentation to be induced by the encounters. Fragments of substellar mass can form via disk fragmentation, shock layer fragmentation and tidal tail fragmentation, and the effectiveness of each mechanism is closely related to the initial disk configuration. The fragmentation is also constrained by the relative encounter velocity since the number of fragments decreases quickly with increasing velocity. </p> <p> In comparing to previous studies of protostellar disk encounters it was also found that resolving both the local Jeans Mass during the encounter and the disks' vertical structure are critical to prevent artificial fragmentation and give the correct picture. Heating and cooling rates were estimated in both the optically thin and thick regimes. The comparison between the two indicates that during strong impacts the heating rate increases rapidly but is still comparable to the cooling rate, so the locally isothermal equation of state used in this study is an acceptable approximation. </p> <p> 32 clumps formed in various Qini = 0.9 disk-disk encounters were taken as the sample in an analysis of fragment properties and prospects for their further evolution. The results show that the clump masses are all less than the hydrogen burning mass limit ~ 0.075M0 , so the objects are substellar. Most of the clumps are of brown dwarf mass since the formation of planetary mass clumps is suppressed due to numerical resolution. The mass distribution is broadly consistent to the observed initial mass function in Pleiades. The clumps have highly flattened disk-like shapes and possess large spin angular momentum, which implies that young brown dwarfs may develop disks, jets, or planetary mass companions. About one third of the fragments are unbound to the stars and likely to form free floating brown dwarfs. Orbital analyses of the clumps which are bound to the stars show that there is a lack of close brown dwarf companions ( R < 3 AU), which is consistent to the observed "brown dwarf desert". Many of the orbits are highly eccentric and intersect with other orbits, so ejection of some clumps due to gravitational scattering is likely. Also, dispersion of gas during the encounter and the high spin angular momentum of the clumps may provide mechanisms other than ejection to prevent the clumps from accreting more mass, making the simulated clumps representative of the long term substellar mass function. </p> / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/21592
Date02 1900
CreatorsShen, Sijing
ContributorsWadsley, James, Physics and Astronomy
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish

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