Primordial circumstellar disks in binary systems: Evidence for reduced lifetimes

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Abstract

We combine the results from several multiplicity surveys of pre-main-sequence stars located in four nearby star-forming regions with Spitzer data from three different Legacy Projects. This allows us to construct a sample of 349 targets, including 125 binaries, which we use to to investigate the effect of companions on the evolution of circumstellar disks. We find that the distribution of projected separations of systems with Spitzer excesses is significantly different (P 2.4e-5, according to the K-S test for binaries with separations less than 400 AU) from that of systems lacking evidence for a disk. As expected, systems with projected separations less than 40 AU are half as likely to retain at least one disk than are systems with projected separations in the 40-400 AU range. These results represent the first statistically significant evidence for a correlation between binary separation and the presence of an inner disk (r 1 AU). Several factors (e.g., the incompleteness of the census of close binaries, the use of unresolved disk indicators, and projection effects) have previously masked this correlation in smaller samples. We discuss the implications of our findings for circumstellar disk lifetimes and the formation of planets in multiple systems. © 2009. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

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Cieza, L. A., Padgett, D. L., Allen, L. E., McCabe, C. E., Brooke, T. Y., Carey, S. J., … Rebull, L. M. (2009). Primordial circumstellar disks in binary systems: Evidence for reduced lifetimes. Astrophysical Journal, 696(1 PART 2). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/696/1/L84

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