Simulating the Formation of Massive Protostars: I. Radiative Feedback and Accretion Disks
Mikhail Klassen, Ralph Pudritz, Rolf Kuiper, Thomas Peters, Robi, Banerjee

TL;DR
This study uses advanced radiation hydrodynamic simulations to explore the formation of massive protostars, revealing disk instability, accretion dynamics, and bipolar outflows in high-mass star formation.
Contribution
It introduces a hybrid radiative feedback method and provides detailed simulation results for massive protostar formation without magnetic fields or additional feedback.
Findings
Disks become Toomre-unstable and develop spiral arms.
High-mass protostars drive stable bipolar outflows.
Masses of stars are not limited by their luminosities in simulations.
Abstract
We present radiation hydrodynamic simulations of collapsing protostellar cores with initial masses of 30, 100, and 200 M. We follow their gravitational collapse and the formation of a massive protostar and protostellar accretion disk. We employ a new hybrid radiative feedback method blending raytracing techniques with flux-limited diffusion for a more accurate treatment of the temperature and radiative force. In each case, the disk that forms becomes Toomre-unstable and develops spiral arms. This occurs between 0.35 and 0.55 freefall times and is accompanied by an increase in the accretion rate by a factor of 2-10. Although the disk becomes unstable, no other stars are formed. In the case of our 100 and 200 M simulation, the star becomes highly super-Eddington and begins to drive bipolar outflow cavities that expand outwards. These radiatively-driven bubbles appear…
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