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Protoplanetary Discs Star formation Lecture Series 12 December 2012 Andrea Stolte Protoplanetary Discs Outline of lectures Oct. 10th : Practical details & Introduction Oct. 17th : Physical processes in the ISM (I): gas + dust radiative processes, solving radiative transfer Oct. 24th : Physical processes in the ISM (II): thermal balance of the ISM, heating/cooling mechanisms Oct. 31st : Interstellar chemistry Nov. 7th : ISM, molecular clouds Nov. 14th : Equilibrium configuration and collapse Nov. 21th : Protostars Nov. 28th : Pre-main sequence evolution Dec. 5th : Dies Academicus Dec. 12th : Discs Dec. 19st : Planet formation Jan. 9th : Formation of high-mass stars Jan. 16th : IMF and star formation on the galactic scale Jan. 23th : Extragalactic star formation Jan. 30th : Visit of Effelsberg (?) Organisational: Effelsberg & Exam date Wednesday, Jan 30 excursion? Wednesday, Feb 13 exam? Andrea Stolte Outline of today’s lecture Literature: Accretion Processes in Star Formation Lee Hartmann 2000, (Cambridge Univ Press) Chapters 5 & 6 Star Formation Palla & Stahler 2004, Wiley-VCH (Weinheim) Chapter 11.3, 17.3 An Introduction to Star Formation Ward-Thompson & Whitworth 2011 Cambridge University Press (Cambridge) Chapter 8.1,8.2 (for a brief overview) Andrea Stolte Outline of today’s lecture Circumstellar discs Historical note Discovery of T Tauri stars Indirect evidence for circumstellar discs Direct disc observations Disc radiation Energy sources Accretion luminosity Irradiation of central star light Angular momentum transport Spectral energy distributions A brief introduction to SEDs Disc classification scheme Disc models The optically thick accretion disc Measuring disc masses Disc evolution & depletion mechanims Andrea Stolte Circumstellar discs around young stars Motivation: • most, if not all, young stars form through disc accretion. • These discs are the places of planet formation. Andrea Stolte Young, circumstellar discs A brief history: • The “Solar nebular hypothesis” 1734: Emanuel Swedenborg: Nebular Hypothesis "Urnebel" 1755: Immanuel Kant: Rotating Cloud "Urwolke" “Allgemeine Naturgeschichte und Theorie des Himmels” 1796: Pierre-Simon Laplace: Rotating Gasball w/ Gravitation But: Planets have 99% of angular momentum in solar system ⇒ Angular momentum problem! time passes... 1972: Victor Safronov: Solar Nebula-Disc-Model ⇒ First full explanation of the formation of the Sun & Planets The solution: Disc solves the angular momentum problem! 1974: Lynden-Bell & Pringle: Calculation of full disc model Andrea Stolte Indirect evidence for circumstellar gas + dust discs T Tauri 100 year lightcurve T Tauri 3 year lightcurve T Tauri stars were discovered as a new class of variable sources. Early on, it was suggested that they might be young stars harbouring circumstellar discs, from which planets might form. Discovery & definition: Joy 1945, Herbig 1962 Identification as PMS stars: Ambartsumian 1947, 1952 Andrea Stolte Indirect evidence for circumstellar gas + dust discs “If this interpretation of T Tauri stars is correct, it will provide new and important evidence on the conditions under which the planets in the solar system were formed.” Lynden-Bell & Pringle 1974 (as quoted in Hartmann 2000) Definitions: T Tauri star (TTS): young star ≲ 10-20 Myr with 0.5 < M < 2 Msun Classical TTS: T Tauri star with strong infrared excess Weak-line TTS: T Tauri star without infrared excess (or very little) Herbig Ae/Be star: young star ≲ 10 Myr with M ≳ 2 Msun “e” = strong emission lines (Hα, Brγ) are seen in spectra Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Indirect evidence for circumstellar gas + dust discs Despite historical predictions... Discs are a relatively young field of astronomy What caused discs to be - finally - detected? 1. The invention of infrared detectors ⇒ Infrared measurements revealed circumstellar matter in “spectral enegery distributions” (SEDs) ⇒ Differences between “extinction” and “excess” allowed the conclusion that matter is distributed not in a shell, but in a disc 2. The sensitivity of optical & infrared telescopes ⇒ Disc material is cold, and central stars are extincted, hence faint 3. The enhancement of spatial resolution ⇒ direct detections of discs became possible Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Indirect evidence for circumstellar gas + dust discs • Spectral energy distributions (coarse spectra) • Infrared “excess” emission Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Young stars with discs vs pre-main sequence stars The strong infrared emission shows up as “infrared excess” * Class I (disc/envelope) • Class II (disc) o Class III (remnant disc) normal reddening path objects with IR excess Hillenbrand 1992 Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Young stars with discs vs pre-main sequence stars The location of stars with discs is comparable to that of PMS stars Herbig Ae & Be stars Pre-Main Sequence stars Herbig Be star with disc Hillenbrand 1992 Bochum 6 age: 10 Myr Mathew et al. 2010 Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Where we are today: Catalogue of 160 resolved discs http://circumstellardisks.org 160 directly imaged/resolved discs * 128 Pre-main sequence discs = young discs, possibly accreting * 32 debris discs = residual discs possibly with planets Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Direct detection of young, circumstellar discs Chris O’Dell / Rice Univ. NASA Andrea Stolte Direct detection of young, circumstellar discs in shadowed light... “silhouette discs” slide NASA/ESA, courtesy Sebastian Wolf/ L. Ricci ESO Direct detection of young, circumstellar discs NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Direct detection of young, circumstellar discs NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Direct detection of young, circumstellar discs Disc radiation can be observed directly with long-wavelength imaging. Outline of today’s lecture Circumstellar discs Historical note Discovery of T Tauri stars Indirect evidence for circumstellar discs Direct disc observations Disc radiation Energy sources Accretion luminosity Irradiation of central star light Angular momentum transport Spectral energy distributions A brief introduction to SEDs Disc classification scheme Disc models The optically thick accretion disc Measuring disc masses Disc evolution & depletion mechanims Andrea Stolte Approximate treatment of discs Circumstellar discs are heated by two mechanism: • accretion = inspiral of material to the central star • light from the central star Here, we make the following simplifying assumptions: • Keplerian velocity vcirc >> inward motion by drag/viscosity → gas/dust to first order on circular Keplerian orbits → drag forces by viscosity can -- to first order! - be neglected • self-gravity of disc is neglected, Mdisc << Mstar → total kin + pot energy of particle with mass m in the disc: E = - GM* m / 2r is determined by stellar potential. • Ṁ = mass accretion rate is constant with time • “steady-state disc” = the disc is constant over considered timescales Andrea Stolte Accretion as the energy source If accretion is the dominant source of luminosity, all light emitted from the disc has to be balanced by the accretion luminosity. Plausibility argument: - a particle of mass Δm accreted from infinity initially has E grav = 0 - at the surface of the star, the virial theorem demands that the same particle has Egrav = 2 Ekin, Kepler = Δm v2 = G M* Δm / R* The total energy available from accreting particles from large radii onto the stellar surface is then given by: ΔEacc = [ 0 ‒ G M* Ṁ / R* ] = ‒ G M* Ṁ / R* energy at infinity energy at stellar surface Again following the virial theorem, 1/2 of this energy will heat the star, 1/2 will be radiated away as accretion luminosity. Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Accretion as the energy source If accretion is the dominant source of luminosity, all light emitted from the disc has to be balanced by the accretion luminosity. As material spirals in, the potential engery has to be radiated away by the disc. Imagine a small disc particle at radius R is accreted through an annulus ΔR: Lacc = GM* Ṁ ΔR 2R Ṁ : accretion rate R M* : mass of the star ΔR R is radiated away through the disc surface: GM* Ṁ ΔR 2R ‗ 2 x 2πRΔR σTd4 R area of escaping radiation Solving for Td gives the variation of the disc temperature with radius Td,acc = ( GM* Ṁ 8πσ R3 ) 1/4 = ( GM* Ṁ 8πσ ) 1/4 Andrea Stolte -3/4 R Accretion as the energy source In a real optically thick accretion disc, heating will influence the inner parts of the disc nearest to the star (R ~ few R*). Here, viscosity cannot be ignored. When viscosity and dissipation is taken into account, the full solution becomes: Td,acc = ( 3GM* Ṁ 8πσ R3 ) 1/4 ⎡ 1‒ ⎣ R* (R ) 1/2 ⎤ ⎦ with a temperature maximum at Rmax = 1.36 R* Tmax = 0.488 ( 3GM* Ṁ 8πσ R* 3 1/4 ) For accretion as the major energy source of the disc luminosity, T ~ R -3/4 for the outer disc where R > R*, with an extra viscosity term when progressing towards the stellar surface. Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Disc heating as the energy source If disc heating from the central star is the dominant source of luminosity, (almost) all light emitted from the disc has to be balanced by the “irradiation” luminosity. Disc irradiation: L* <cos φ> = 4π R2 σSB Td4 at every R in the disc. φ R* R where <cos φ> ~ R*/R is the average angle of incidence. Td,heat = ( L * R* 4πσ 1/4 ) -3/4 R In both cases, the disc temperatures varies as R-3/4 . If accretion and irradiation both contribute significantly to the light: Td = Td,heat + Td,acc ~ R-3/4 Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Accretion vs. disc heating Which process dominates? Typical T Tauri star accretion rates: Ṁ ~ 10-8 Msun/yr ⇒ L* >> GM* Ṁ / R* In many T Tauri stars, irradiation dominates, and disc heating defines T d . In more massive stars, during eposides of burst-like accretion, accretion rates can achieve Ṁ ~ 10-4 Msun/yr ⇒ L* ≲ GM* Ṁ / R* During accretion bursts, the accretion luminosity dominates. There is no unique answer to the question which process dominates. A high or low accretion rate is a good indicator, especially in low-mass stars. In high-mass stars, such as Herbig Be stars, the stellar luminosity may always win. Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Outline of today’s lecture Circumstellar discs Historical note Discovery of T Tauri stars Indirect evidence for circumstellar discs Direct disc observations Disc radiation Energy sources Accretion luminosity Irradiation of central star light Angular momentum transport Spectral energy distributions A brief introduction to SEDs Disc classification scheme Disc models The optically thick accretion disc Measuring disc masses Disc evolution & depletion mechanims Andrea Stolte Angular momentum transport The idea that young stars accumulate material via disc accretion was brought forth to solve the angular momentum problem. Why is angular momentum transported outwards? Energy balance for 2 particles in the disc: E ‗ ‒ GMm1 ‒ GMm2 ‗ _ GM 2r1 2r2 2 ( mr 1 1 + m2 r2 ) Angular momentum of the 2 particles in the disc: J = (GM)1/2 (m1 r11/2 + m2 r21/2) Angular momentum has to be conserved. The energy in the system is not conserved: Energy is radiated away as accretion luminosity as material spirals in. Hence the total system energy is decreased. Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Angular momentum transport Why is angular momentum transported outwards? Angular momentum of the 2 particles in the disc: J = (GM)1/2 (m1 r11/2 + m2 r21/2) To conserve angular momentum, we move the particles in opposite directions in the disc: ΔJ = (GM)1/2 (m1 r11/2 (1+Δr1/r1 )1/2 + m2 r21/2 (1+Δr2 /r2)1/2) Δr1 r1 Angular momentum conservation ( --> excercise 1): m1 r1-1/2 Δr1 = ‒ m2 r2-1/2 Δr2 which allows us to eliminate either Δr1 or Δr2 when we derive ΔE. Andrea Stolte Δr2 r2 Angular momentum transport Energy difference in the system after moving both particles (in terms of particle 1): ‗ ‒ GMm1Δ r1 ΔE 2r12 r13/2 _ ( r23/2 1 ) ΔJ1 = (GM)1/2 m1 r1-1/2 Δr1 Case: particle 1 is initially further out than particle 2 r1 / r2 > 1: ΔE < 0 if Δ r1 > 0 → m1 is moved further outwards at the same time, m2 is moved inwards, and m1 carries out angular momentum. Case: particle 1 is initially further in than particle 2 r1 / r2 < 1: ΔE < 0 if Δ r1 < 0 → m1 is moved further inwards at the same time, m2 is moved outwards, and m2 carries out angular momentum. The accretion process tends to move particles inwards to decrease the energy of the disc-star system. Angular momentum is conserved by moving particles with higher J outwards, particles with lower J inwards. Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Angular momentum transport II The outwards transport of angular momentum is related to the fact that the disc has viscosity, but the process can be understood qualitatively. In a Keplerian disc: v2 = GM* / R implies: Ω = v / R ~ R-3/2 ⇒ particles at smaller R move faster than particles at larger R. Friction: inner particle angular velocity is slightly decreased ⇒ particle looses J as it moves further in outer particle angular velocity is slightly increased ⇒ particle gains J as it moves further out If there is viscosity, particles at smaller R will drag particles at larger R, trying to increase those particles angular velocity. At the same time, particles at larger R will try to slow down particles at smaller R. The net effect is carrying out angular momentum to large radii in the disc, while carrying inwards a substantial fraction of the disc mass (but not all mass). NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Outline of today’s lecture Circumstellar discs Historical note Discovery of T Tauri stars Indirect evidence for circumstellar discs Direct disc observations Disc radiation Energy sources Accretion luminosity Irradiation of central star light Angular momentum transport Spectral energy distributions A brief introduction to SEDs Disc classification scheme Disc models The optically thick accretion disc Measuring disc masses Disc evolution & depletion mechanims Andrea Stolte A brief introduction to SEDs Discs were originally detected, suspected, and classified from spectral energy distributions In essence, a spectral energy distribution is a very coarse spectrum. Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO A brief introduction to SEDs Discs were originally detected, suspected, and classified from spectral energy distributions In essence, a spectral energy distribution is a very coarse spectrum. B V R I z •• • • • Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Wavelength regime of discs Discs are detected by their dust emission. The predominant wavelength regime covers all infrared wavebands. UV Vis NIR MIR FIR mm radio UV: 20 - 400 nm Visible: 400 - 800 nm Near IR: 0.8 - (2.5-5) μm Mid IR: (2.5-5) - (25-40) μm Far IR: (25-40) - 300 μm sub-mm: 300 - 1000 μm mm: 1 mm - 1 cm radio: > 1 cm Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Wavelength regime of discs Discs are detected by their dust emission. The predominant wavelength regime covers all infrared wavebands. → → → → Credit: IPAC/Caltech Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Disc evolution & classification Different groups of star-disc systems were identified based on their infrared SED shapes. Class I - the youngest systems Stellar photosphere dominates visible λ Disc emission can have gaps Class I: λFλ ~ λs ≥ 0 λ ≥ 2 μm -- optically thin envelope in equ. with star L* = 16π r2 σ T4(r) → T(r) ~ r-1/2 → λFλ ~ λ0 Lower-mass stars are more frequent in Class I Far-IR emission can be much stronger than stellar photosphere => infalling envelope Hillenbrand et al. 1992 Andrea Stolte Disc evolution & classification Different groups of star-disc systems were identified based on their infrared SED shapes. Class II - young stars with discs Stellar photosphere dominates visible λ Disc emission dominates infrared λ Class II: λFλ ~ λ-4/3 λ ≥ 2 μm -- flat, optically thick accretion discs -- characteristic “gap” at 1-2 μm • optically thin region within few R* → absence of warm dust = “holes” T Tauri stars & Herbig Ae (Be) stars alike Disc luminosity can dominate over stellar luminosity Hillenbrand et al. 1992 Andrea Stolte Disc evolution & classification Different groups of star-disc systems were identified based on their infrared SED shapes. Class III - young stars without dusty discs Disc emission can be very weak Class III: λFλ ~ λ-3 -- stellar photosphere in Rayleigh-Jeans limit -- emission, if any, from residual disc → warm dust is already processed into planetesimals Many Herbig Be stars → more massive stars loose discs more rapidly than lower-mass stars at the same age! Hillenbrand et al. 1992 Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Disc evolution & classification What does the shape of the SED tell us about disc physics? Class I: λFλ ~ λs ≥ 0 λ ≥ 2 μm gap -- optically thin envelope in equ. with star L* = 16π r2 σ T4(r) → T(r) ~ r-1/2 → λFλ ~ λ0 Lower-mass stars are more frequent in Class I λFλ ~ λ-4/3 λ ≥ 2 μm -- flat, optically thick accretion discs -- characteristic “gap” at 1-2 μm • optically thin region within few R* → absence of warm dust = “holes” gap Time Class II: T Tauri stars & Herbig Ae (Be) stars alike Class III: λFλ ~ λ-3 -- stellar photosphere in Rayleigh-Jeans limit -- emission, if any, from residual disc → warm dust is already processed into planetesimals Many Herbig Be stars → more massive stars loose discs more rapidly than lower-mass stars at the same age! Hillenbrand et al. 1992 Outline of today’s lecture Circumstellar discs Historical note Discovery of T Tauri stars Indirect evidence for circumstellar discs Direct disc observations Disc radiation Energy sources Accretion luminosity Irradiation of central star light Angular momentum transport Spectral energy distributions A brief introduction to SEDs Disc classification scheme Disc models The optically thick accretion disc Measuring disc masses Disc evolution & depletion mechanims Andrea Stolte Disc evolution & classification What does the shape of the SED tell us about disc physics? Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Disc models - the steady-state optically thick disc Optically thick discs can be modelled as accretion (or irradiation) discs We have seen before that the temperature follows an R-3/4 dependence: Td,acc = ( GM* Ṁ 8πσ 1/4 ) Td,acc = T0 R -3/4 ( R0) -3/4 R = where GM* Ṁ 1/4 R -3/4 ( 8πσ R*3 ) ( R*) T0 = ( GM* Ṁ 1/4 ) 8πσ R*3 is a characteristic temperature (approx twice Tmax) If the disc radiates as a black body at every radius R, the disc luminosity at each wavelength or frequency can be approximated using the Planck function: Lν = ∫ πB ν Td(R) 2π R dR insert Bν & set x = hν/kT(R) Inserting the Planck function and the above approximation, we can show that: Lν = 16π2hR02 3c 2 ( ) kT0 8/3 h ⇒ Lν ~ ν1/3 or λLλ ~ λ-4/3 ν1/3 ∫ x5/3 dx x (e - 1) where the last term is ~ constant. compare to Black Body: λBλ ~ λ-4 At R > R*, the disc luminosity falls off much less steeply than a blackbody with the hottest T in the disc. Disc models - accretion rates Optically thick accretion discs without inner holes: λ-4/3 Hillenbrand et al. 1992 Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Disc models - inner holes Optically thick discs with inner holes: Hillenbrand et al. 1992 Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Schematic view of a young stellar disc The complete picture is, naturally, a bit more complicated... Hartmann 2000 Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Measuring disc masses from observations At long wavelengths, discs are optically thin. The light permeating the disc traces the amount of material along the line of sight, and the disc mass can be measured. Andrea Stolte Measuring disc masses from observations Assumptions: i) geometrically thin disc ii) vertically isothermal => T = T(R) iii) emission is black body of local T(R) The locally emitted flux can then be integrated to yield the apparent luminosity: Rd νLν = 4πd2 νFν = 4π cos(i) ∫R νB ν [1‒ exp(‒τν/cos(i))] 2πR dR i where: τν = optical depth at radius R (assumed constant in z) Fν = flux measured on Earth Optically thick disc case: ⇒ νLν = 4π cos(i) ∫ νB Optically thin disc case: ⇒ νLν = 4π cos(i) τν >> 1 ν 2πR dR τν << 1 ∫ νB ν => d = distance to the source i = disc inclination angle Ri = inner disc radius Rd = outer disc radius 1‒ exp(‒τν/cos(i)) → 1 independent of τν → Σmass => 1‒ exp(‒τν/cos(i)) → τν kν Σmass 2πR dR Andrea Stolte with τν = kν Σmass → disc mass! Measuring disc masses from observations The integral can be solved using: T(R) = T0 (R/R0)-q specifically at disc edge: T(R d) = T0 (Rd/R0)-q Σ(R) = Σ0 (R/R0)-p Rd Md = 2π Σ RdR Ri Discs are optically thin in the long-wavelength regime: ∫ Rayleigh-Jeans: hν << kT → Bν = 2ν2 kT / c2 ⇒ νLν = 8πk ν3 κν / c2 Md T(Rd) (2-p)/(2-p-q) The temperature-radius relation is known from the optically thick wavelength regime, where we estimated: T(R) ~ R-3/4 hence q = 0.75 from disc models it is also known that Σ(R) ~ R-3/4 to R-1 hence p ~ 0.75 can be assumed Measuring νLν and making assumptions about κν, the disc mass can be derived. Andrea Stolte Disc mass vs stellar mass Williams & Cieza 2011 Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Outline of today’s lecture Circumstellar discs Historical note Discovery of T Tauri stars Indirect evidence for circumstellar discs Direct disc observations Disc radiation Energy sources Accretion luminosity Irradiation of central star light Angular momentum transport Spectral energy distributions A brief introduction to SEDs Disc classification scheme Disc models The optically thick accretion disc Measuring disc masses Disc evolution & depletion mechanims Andrea Stolte Disc destruction & depletion mechanisms The fraction of discs in young star clusters decreases with age: After 5 Myr, there are essentially no discs left. 5 Myr If discs are left, they mostly survive around low-mass (T Tauri) stars. Hillenbrand 2005 Andrea Stolte NASA/ESA, L. Ricci / ESO Disc destruction & depletion mechanisms What destroys young circumstellar discs? T Tauri stars: 40 % “weak-line” WTTS 60 % “classical” CTTS = thick discs Herbig Be stars: only few % discs after 2-3 Myr I. UV radiation destroys dust grains → as dust is the main opacity source, discs become optically thin and hence do not reprocess starlight and irradiate in thermal wavelengths anymore High-mass stars have substantially more UV radiation → discs around high-mass stars are rapidly depleted II. Binary companions tidally truncate discs → the tidal forces between binary stars can disrupt the outer regions of discs in tight binary systems → most stars are born in binaries! GG Tau 30% of T Tauri stars have companions with R ≲ 30 AU Mathieu et al. 1999 → discs around stars born in multiple systems are depleted Andrea Stolte Disc destruction & depletion mechanisms What destroys young circumstellar discs? III. Disc depletion by grain growth → as dust particles stick together and increase in size, they reprocess light at increasingly longer λ → the inner rim of the disc gets depleted early, the disc beomces invisible in the near-infrared Formalhaut’s Disc (~100-300 Myr) Formation of planetesimals explains transition discs (10 Myr), but the timescales for planet formation are not yet well known. Andrea Stolte Summary I. T Tauri stars and Herbig Ae/Be stars are pre-main sequence stars with discs. The disc emission is evidenced by excess flux in infrared to mm wavelengths. => Stars with discs are characterised by their infrared to mm SEDs. II. The existence of discs around young stars solves the angular momentum problem. In the disc, angular momentum is carried outwards with low-mass particles, while the majority of the mass is transported inwards, and accreted onto the star. III. The luminosity of young stars’ discs is generated by accretion or irradiation luminosity of the central star light. In both cases, the most simple, basic disc model suggests a temperature profile: T ~ R-3/4 -4/3 This can be used to show that λLλ ~ λ . The SED of the disc falls off much less rapidly than the Rayleigh-Jeans tail of the star, hence the infrared excess emission. IV. Discs are optically thin in the far-infrared to mm regime. Here, the measured flux traces the amount of material in the disc, and the disc mass can be derived. Disc masses are typically small fractions of a few % of the stellar mass. There is a weak tendency for higher-mass stars to harbour higher-mass discs (and possibly form higher-mass planets). Andrea Stolte Next lecture... 19 December! Formation of planets and planetary systems Next time, we will study the evolution of the disc into a planetary system. Andrea Stolte