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The formation of circumbinary planets through disc fragmentation

Teasdale, Matthew orcid iconORCID: 0000-0003-0419-6074 and Stamatellos, Dimitris orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-4502-8344 (2026) The formation of circumbinary planets through disc fragmentation. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 548 (3). ISSN 0035-8711

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stag476

Abstract

Over 50 circumbinary exoplanets have been discovered in recent years, with several of them being gas giants on wide orbits ( > 10 au). The aim of this work is to investigate whether these planets can form thr ough cir cumbinary disc fragmentation due to gravitational instability. We perform hydrodynamic simulations of marginally unstable (i) circumstellar discs, (ii) circumbinary discs with the same temperature profile as the circumstellar discs (fiducial model), and (iii) realistic circumbinary discs heated individually by each star of the binary. We find that discs around binaries with wider separations fragment earlier and more efficiently than those around closer binaries, and earlier than circumstellar discs. Realistic circumbinary discs form a larger number of protoplanets ( 9 ± 0 . 9 protoplanets per disc), than fiducial circumbinary ( 6 . 5 ± 0 . 6 ), and circumstellar discs ( 7 . 5 ± 0 . 8 ). In realistic circumbinary discs, initial protoplanet masses are lower than those formed in circumstellar discs, and a larger fraction of them lie in the planetary-mass regime, favouring the formation of gas giant planets over brown dwarfs or low-mass stars. Fragmentation occurs predominantly beyond a binary-imposed forbidden region of ∼50 au, leading to final orbital radii peaking at ∼100 au. We also find that in circumbinary discs dynamical interactions eject a higher fraction of protoplanets than in circumstellar discs, producing free-floating objects, with ejection velocities on the order of 2 - 6 kms −1 . We conclude that gravitational fragmentation of circumbinary discs is a viable and potentially significant formation pathway for circumbinary gas giant planets.


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