The burst mode of accretion and disk fragmentation in the early embedded stages of star formation
Eduard I. Vorobyov (1, 2), Shantanu Basu (3) ((1) The Institute, for Computational Astrophysics, Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Canada, (2), Reseach Institute of Physics, Southern Federal University, Rostov-on-Don,, Russia, (3) The University of Western Ontario, London

TL;DR
This paper models the early stages of star formation, showing how disk fragmentation driven by gravitational instabilities leads to accretion bursts similar to FU-Orionis events, influenced by initial core properties and radiation.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed energy balance thin-disk model for early protostellar disks, highlighting the conditions for fragmentation and associated accretion variability during star formation.
Findings
Higher core angular momentum promotes fragmentation.
Background radiation moderates disk fragmentation.
Fragmentation-driven bursts resemble FU-Orionis events.
Abstract
We revisit our original papers on the burst mode of accretion by incorporating a detailed energy balance equation into a thin-disk model for the formation and evolution of circumstellar disks around low-mass protostars.Our model includes the effect of radiative cooling, viscous and shock heating, and heating due to stellar and background irradiation. Following the collapse from the prestellar phase allows us to model the early embedded phase of disk formation and evolution. During this time, the disk is susceptible to fragmentation, depending upon the properties of the initial prestellar core. Globally, we find that higher initial core angular momentum and mass content favors more fragmentation, but higher levels of background radiation can moderate the tendency to fragment. A higher rate of mass infall onto the disk than that onto the star is a necessary but not sufficient condition…
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