Evolution of Massive Protostars via Disk Accretion
Takashi Hosokawa, Harold W. Yorke, Kazuyuki Omukai

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of massive protostars under high accretion rates, revealing that they become bloated with large radii and low temperatures, which impacts their observable properties and star formation processes.
Contribution
It compares the effects of cold disk accretion and spherical accretion on massive protostar evolution, highlighting the robustness of protostellar expansion at high accretion rates.
Findings
Protostars reach radii of 30-400 R_sun during accretion.
Large protostellar radii lead to low UV luminosity.
Protostars do not contract to ZAMS at high accretion rates.
Abstract
Mass accretion onto (proto-)stars at high accretion rates > 10^-4 M_sun/yr is expected in massive star formation. We study the evolution of massive protostars at such high rates by numerically solving the stellar structure equations. In this paper we examine the evolution via disk accretion. We consider a limiting case of "cold" disk accretion, whereby most of the stellar photosphere can radiate freely with negligible backwarming from the accretion flow, and the accreting material settles onto the star with the same specific entropy as the photosphere. We compare our results to the calculated evolution via spherically symmetric accretion, the opposite limit, whereby the material accreting onto the star contains the entropy produced in the accretion shock front. We examine how different accretion geometries affect the evolution of massive protostars. For cold disk accretion at 10^-3…
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