Simulations of protostellar collapse using multigroup radiation hydrodynamics. II. The second collapse
N. Vaytet, G. Chabrier, E. Audit, B. Commercon, J. Masson, J., Ferguson, F. Delahaye

TL;DR
This paper advances the simulation of protostellar collapse by incorporating multigroup radiative transfer, revealing detailed insights into the formation of Larson's second core and its physical properties.
Contribution
It extends previous models by including multigroup radiative transfer and a non-ideal gas EOS to simulate the second collapse phase of star formation.
Findings
Second core size is approximately 0.003 AU.
Second core mass is about 0.0014 solar masses.
Shock at the second core boundary is strongly subcritical.
Abstract
Star formation begins with the gravitational collapse of a dense core inside a molecular cloud. As the collapse progresses, the centre of the core begins to heat up as it becomes optically thick. The temperature and density in the centre eventually reach high enough values where fusion reactions can ignite; the protostar is born. This sequence of events entail many physical processes, of which radiative transfer is of paramount importance. Many simulations of protostellar collapse make use of a grey treatment of radiative transfer coupled to the hydrodynamics. However, interstellar gas and dust opacities present large variations as a function of frequency. In this paper, we follow-up on a previous paper on the collapse and formation of Larson's first core using multigroup radiation hydrodynamics (Paper I) by extending the calculations to the second phase of the collapse and the…
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