Self-regulated gravitational accretion in protostellar discs
E. I. Vorobyov (1,2), S. Basu (2) ((1) Institute of Physics at, South Federal University, Rostov-on-Don, Russia, (2) The University of, Western Ontario, London, Canada)

TL;DR
This paper presents a numerical model of protostellar disc evolution, highlighting the role of gravitational torques and instabilities in mass and angular momentum transport over several million years.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent, long-term global model of protostellar disc evolution from molecular cloud collapse, emphasizing gravitational torques and stability regulation.
Findings
Gravitational torques drive inward mass transport during early infall phases.
Disc remains near Toomre stability limit with Q around 1.5-2.0.
Outer disc exhibits positive, inner disc negative net gravitational torque.
Abstract
We present a numerical model for the evolution of a protostellar disc that has formed self-consistently from the collapse of a molecular cloud core. The global evolution of the disc is followed for several million years after its formation. The capture of a wide range of spatial and temporal scales is made possible by use of the thin-disc approximation. We focus on the role of gravitational torques in transporting mass inward and angular momentum outward during different evolutionary phases of a protostellar disc with disc-to-star mass ratio of order 0.1. In the early phase, when the infall of matter from the surrounding envelope is substantial, mass is transported inward by the gravitational torques from spiral arms that are a manifestation of the envelope-induced gravitational instability in the disc. In the late phase, when the gas reservoir of the envelope is depleted, the distinct…
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