Feedback Effects on Low-Mass Star Formation
Charles E. Hansen, Richard I. Klein, Christopher F. McKee, and Robert, T. Fisher

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to analyze how protostellar feedback mechanisms, radiation and outflows, influence low-mass star formation, core fragmentation, and the resulting stellar initial mass function.
Contribution
It is the first to simultaneously simulate both radiative transfer and protostellar outflows in low-mass star formation, revealing their combined effects on core fragmentation and star formation efficiency.
Findings
Outflows reduce protostellar masses and luminosities significantly.
Radiation feedback suppresses fragmentation, but outflows diminish radiation's impact.
Simulations reproduce observed protostellar luminosity functions and the galactic initial mass function.
Abstract
Protostellar feedback, both radiation and bipolar outflows, dramatically affects the fragmentation and mass accretion from star-forming cores. We use ORION, an adaptive mesh refinement gravito-radiation-hydrodynamics code, to simulate the formation of a cluster of low-mass stars, including both radiative transfer and protostellar outflows. We ran four simulations to isolate the individual effects of radiation feedback and outflow feedback as well as the combination of the two. Outflows reduce protostellar masses and accretion rates each by a factor of three and therefore reduce protostellar luminosities by an order of magnitude. Thus, while radiation feedback suppresses fragmentation, outflows render protostellar radiation largely irrelevant for low-mass star formation above a mass scale of 0.05 M_sun. We find initial fragmentation of our cloud at half the global Jeans length, ~ 0.1 pc.…
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