4.6 Article

Protoplanetary disk lifetimes vs. stellar mass and possible implications for giant planet populations

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 576, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201424846

Keywords

protoplanetary disks; planet-disk interactions; stars: formation; planetary systems; stars: pre-main sequence

Funding

  1. ESAC Science Operations Division [SC 1300016149]
  2. ESAC Space Science Faculty
  3. Herschel Science Centre
  4. Spanish Ramon y Cajal fellowship [RYC-2009-04497]
  5. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
  6. National Science Foundation
  7. US Department of Energy Office of Science
  8. University of Arizona
  9. Brazilian Participation Group
  10. Brookhaven National Laboratory
  11. University of Cambridge
  12. University of Florida
  13. French Participation Group
  14. German Participation Group
  15. Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias
  16. Michigan State/Notre Dame/JINA Participation Group
  17. Johns Hopkins University
  18. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  19. Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
  20. New Mexico State University
  21. New York University
  22. Ohio State University
  23. Pennsylvania State University
  24. University of Portsmouth
  25. Princeton University
  26. Spanish Participation Group
  27. University of Tokyo
  28. University of Utah
  29. Vanderbilt University
  30. University of Virginia
  31. University of Washington
  32. Yale University
  33. French Institut National des Sciences de l'Univers
  34. CNRS
  35. French Education Ministry
  36. European Southern Observatory
  37. State of Baden-Wuerttemberg
  38. European Commission under networks of the SCIENCE and Human Capital and Mobility programs
  39. Landessternwarte
  40. Heidelberg
  41. Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris
  42. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  43. NASA

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Aims. We study the dependence of protoplanetary disk evolution on stellar mass using a large sample of young stellar objects in nearby young star-forming regions. Methods. We update the protoplanetary disk fractions presented in our recent work (Paper I of this series) derived for 22 nearby (<500 pc) associations between 1 and 100 Myr. We use a subsample of 1428 spectroscopically confirmed members to study the impact of stellar mass on protoplanetary disk evolution. We divide this sample into two stellar mass bins (2 M-circle dot boundary) and two age bins (3 Myr boundary), and use infrared excesses over the photospheric emission to classify objects in three groups: protoplanetary disks, evolved disks, and diskless. The homogeneous analysis and bias corrections allow for a statistically significant inter-comparison of the obtained results. Results. We find robust statistical evidence of disk evolution dependence with stellar mass. Our results, combined with previous studies on disk evolution, confirm that protoplanetary disks evolve faster and/or earlier around high-mass (>2 M-circle dot) stars. We also find a roughly constant level of evolved disks throughout the whole age and stellar mass spectra. Conclusions. We conclude that protoplanetary disk evolution depends on stellar mass. Such a dependence could have important implications for gas giant planet formation and migration, and could contribute to explaining the apparent paucity of hot Jupiters around high-mass stars.

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