4.7 Article

The dispersal of protoplanetary discs - III. Influence of stellar mass on disc photoevaporation

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 508, Issue 3, Pages 3611-3619

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stab2883

Keywords

accretion, accretion discs; protoplanetary discs; circumstellar matter; stars: pre-main-sequence; stars winds, outflows; X-rays: stars

Funding

  1. DFG Research Unit 'Transition Discs' [FOR 2634/2]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy [EXC-2094 -390783311]

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The study reveals a linear relationship between stellar mass and mass-loss rates of circumstellar discs due to X-ray irradiation, with the influence increasing as the X-ray luminosity changes according to stellar mass. The lower aspect ratio of discs allows X-ray irradiation to reach larger radii, leading to the observed linear increase in mass-loss rates even with fixed X-ray luminosity.
The strong X-ray irradiation from young solar-type stars may play a crucial role in the thermodynamics and chemistry of circumstellar discs, driving their evolution in the last stages of disc dispersal as well as shaping the atmospheres of newborn planets. In this paper, we study the influence of stellar mass on circumstellar disc mass-loss rates due to X-ray irradiation, extending our previous study of the mass-loss rate's dependence on the X-ray luminosity and spectrum hardness. We focus on stars with masses between 0.1 and 1 M-circle dot, which are the main target of current and future missions to find potentially habitable planets. We find a linear relationship between the mass-loss rates and the stellar masses when changing the X-ray luminosity accordingly with the stellar mass. This linear increase is observed also when the X-ray luminosity is kept fixed because of the lower disc aspect ratio which allows the X-ray irradiation to reach larger radii. We provide new analytical relations for the mass-loss rates and profiles of photoevaporative winds as a function of the stellar mass that can be used in disc and planet population synthesis models. Our photoevaporative models correctly predict the observed trend of inner-disc lifetime as a function of stellar mass with an increased steepness for stars smaller than 0.3 M-circle dot, indicating that X-ray photoevaporation is a good candidate to explain the observed disc dispersal process.

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