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Anders Johansen

Anders Johansen

Professor

Anders Johansen

The evolution of the flux-size relationship in protoplanetary discs by viscous evolution and radial pebble drift

Author

  • J. Appelgren
  • A. Johansen
  • M. Lambrechts
  • J. Jørgensen
  • N. Van Der Marel
  • N. Ohashi
  • J. Tobin

Summary, in English

In this paper we study the evolution of radiative fluxes, flux radii and observable dust masses in protoplanetary discs, in order to understand how these depend on the angular momentum budget and on the assumed heat sources. We use a model that includes the formation and viscous evolution of protoplanetary gas discs, together with the growth and radial drift of the dust component. We find that we are best able to match the observed fluxes and radii of class 0/I discs when we assume (i) an initial total angular momentum budget corresponding to a centrifugal radius of 40 au around solar-like stars, and (ii) inefficient viscous heating. Fluxes and radii of class II discs appear consistent with disc models with angular momentum budgets equivalent to centrifugal radii of both 40 or 10 au for solar-like stars, and with models where viscous heating occurs at either full efficiency or at reduced efficiency. During the first ∼0.5 Myr of their evolution discs are generally optically thick at λ = 1.3 mm. However, after this discs are optically thin at mm-wavelengths, supporting standard means of dust mass estimates. Using a disc population synthesis model, we then show that the evolution of the cumulative evolution of the observable dust masses agrees well with that observed in young star forming clusters of different ages.

Department/s

  • Astrophysics

Publishing year

2025-02-01

Language

English

Publication/Series

Astronomy and Astrophysics

Volume

694

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

EDP Sciences

Topic

  • Astronomy, Astrophysics and Cosmology

Keywords

  • Methods: numerical
  • Planets and satellites: formation
  • Protoplanetary disks

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0004-6361