Impact of initial models and variable accretion rates on the pre-main-sequence evolution of massive and intermediate-mass stars and the early evolution of HII regions
Lionel Haemmerl\'e, Thomas Peters

TL;DR
This study models how initial stellar structures and variable accretion rates influence the early evolution of massive stars and their HII regions, highlighting the importance of stellar structure in feedback processes.
Contribution
It introduces pre-main-sequence evolutionary tracks considering variable accretion and different initial structures, revealing their impact on stellar and HII region development.
Findings
Radiative models show strong swelling and rapid response to accretion bursts.
Convective models exhibit less sensitivity, with steadily increasing ionizing flux.
Early stellar structure significantly affects feedback and HII region evolution.
Abstract
Massive star formation requires the accretion of gas at high rate while the star is already bright. Its actual luminosity depends sensitively on the stellar structure. We compute pre-main-sequence tracks for massive and intermediate-mass stars with variable accretion rates and study the evolution of stellar radius, effective temperature and ionizing luminosity, starting at with convective or radiative structures. The radiative case shows a much stronger swelling of the protostar for high accretion rates than the convective case. For radiative structures, the star is very sensitive to the accretion rate and reacts quickly to accretion bursts, leading to considerable changes in photospheric properties on timescales as short as 100 - 1000 yr. The evolution for convective structures is much less influenced by the instantaneous accretion rate, and produces a monotonically…
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