Planets form in young protoplanetary discs that are made of gas and dust. We simulate locally isothermal gaseous protoplanetary discs evolving around low mass stars using the SPH code ``PHANTOM'' while varying the disc-to-star mass ratio and the initial exponent of the temperature profile. We investigate different temperature profiles and different disc-to-star mass ratios to estimate the surface density profile of the disc when it reaches the equilibrium state. We refer to the period before this point as the time taken for the discs to relax (approximately few
PHANTOM was used to simulate locally isothermal gaseous protoplanetary discs evolving around low mass stars.
Phantom is a fast, parallel, modular and low-memory smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) and magnetohydrodynamics code developed over the last decade for astrophysical applications in three dimensions. The code has been developed with a focus on stellar, galactic, planetary and high energy astrophysics and has already been used widely for studies of accretion discs and turbulence, from the birth of planets to how black holes accrete.