Jet formation from massive young stars: Magnetohydrodynamics versus radiation pressure
Bhargav Vaidya, Christian Fendt, Henrik Beuther, Oliver Porth

TL;DR
This study uses magnetohydrodynamic simulations including radiation pressure to analyze how outflows from massive young stars evolve, showing that increasing stellar mass leads to less collimated jets due to radiative effects.
Contribution
It introduces a modified MHD simulation incorporating radiative forces, revealing the impact of stellar radiation on outflow collimation during star formation.
Findings
Radiation forces cause significant de-collimation of outflows.
Higher stellar mass results in wider outflow opening angles.
Stellar radiation dominates the jet dynamics over disk pressure.
Abstract
Observations indicate that outflows from massive young stars are more collimated during their early evolution compared to later stages. Our paper investigates various physical processes that impacts the outflow dynamics, i.e. its acceleration and collimation. We perform axisymmetric MHD simulations particularly considering the radiation pressure exerted by the star and the disk. We have modified the PLUTO code to include radiative forces in the line-driving approximation. We launch the outflow from the innermost disk region (r < 50 AU) by magneto-centrifugal acceleration. In order to disentangle MHD effects from radiative forces, we start the simulation in pure MHD, and later switch on the radiation force. We perform a parameter study considering different stellar masses (thus luminosity), magnetic flux, and line-force strength. For our reference simulation - assuming a 30 Msun star, we…
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