4.6 Article

The protoplanetary disk population in the ρ-Ophiuchi region L1688 and the time evolution of Class II YSOs

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 663, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202141380

Keywords

protoplanetary disks; submillimeter: planetary systems; stars: formation

Funding

  1. Italian Ministero dell Istruzione, Universita e Ricerca [CUP C52I13000140001]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [325594231 FOR 2634/1 TE 1024/1-1]
  3. DFG cluster of excellence Origins
  4. European Union [823823]
  5. European Research Council (ERC) via the ERC Synergy Grant ECOGAL [855130]
  6. ERC Advanced Grant The Dawn of Organic Chemistry [741002]
  7. Science and Technology Foundation of Portugal (FCT) [IF/00194/2015, PTDC/FIS-AST/28731/2017, UIDB/00099/2020]
  8. MCIU-AEI (Spain) grant [AYA2017-84390-C2-R]
  9. FEDER
  10. European Research Council (ERC) [741002] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigates the properties of Class II/F disks in the L1688 region and compares them to other nearby regions. It finds linear trends in the relationships between mass accretion rate, disk dust mass, and stellar mass. The study suggests that planet formation may occur early in the evolution of these disks, leading to collisions that replenish the grain population.
Context. Planets form during the first few Myr of the evolution of the star-disk system, possibly before the end of the embedded phase. The properties of very young disks and their subsequent evolution reflect the presence and properties of their planetary content. Aims. We present a study of the Class II/F disk population in L1688, the densest and youngest region of star formation in Ophiuchus. We also compare it to other well-known nearby regions of different ages, namely Lupus, Chamaeleon I, Corona Australis, Taurus and Upper Scorpius. Methods. We selected our L1688 sample using a combination of criteria (available ALMA data, Gaia membership, and optical and near-IR spectroscopy) to determine the stellar and disk properties, specifically stellar mass (M-*), average population age, mass accretion rate ((M)over dot(acc)) and disk dust mass (M-dust) We applied the same procedure in a consistent manner to the other regions. Results. In L1688 the relations between (M)over dot(acc) and M-*, M-dust and M-*, and (M)over dot(acc) and M-dust have a roughly linear trend with slopes 1.8-1.9 for the first two relations and similar to 1 for the third, which is similar to what found in the other regions. When ordered according to the characteristic age of each region, which ranging from similar to 0.5 to similar to 5 Myr, Macc decreases as t(-1), when corrected for the different stellar mass content; M-dast follows roughly the same trend, ranging between 0.5 and 5 Myr, but has an increase of a factor of similar to 3 at ages of 2-3 Myr. We suggest that this could result from an earlier planet formation, followed by collisional fragmentation that temporarily replenishes the millimeter-size grain population. The dispersion of (M)over dot(acc) and M-dust around the best-fitting relation with M-*, as well as that of (M)over dot(acc) versus M-dust are equally large. When adding all the regions together to increase the statistical significance, we find that the dispersions have continuous distributions with a log-normal shape and similar widths (similar to 0.8 dex). Conclusions. This detailed study of L1688 confirms the general picture of Class II/F disk properties and extends it to a younger age. The amount of dust observed at similar to 1 Myr is not sufficient to assemble the majority of planetary systems, which suggests an earlier formation process for planetary cores. The dust mass traces to a large extent the disk gas mass evolution, even if the ratio M-dust/M-disk at the earliest age (0.5-1 Myr) is not known. Two properties are still not understood: the steep dependence of (M)over dot(acc) and M-dust on M-* and the cause of the large dispersion in the three relations analyzed in this paper, in particular that of the (M)(over dotacc) versus M-dust relation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available