Interactions of Young Binaries with Disks

Abstract

The environment of a binary star system may contain two circumstellar disks, one orbiting each of the stars, and a circumbinary disk orbiting about the entire binary. The disk structure and evolution are modified by the presence of the binary. Resonances emit waves and open disk gaps. The binary's total mass and mass ratio as well as orbital elements can be modified by the disks. Signatures of these interactions provide observational tests of the dynamical models. The interaction of young planets with protoplanetary disks circularizes the orbits of Jupiter-mass planets and may produce much more massive extrasolar planets on eccentric orbits.

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