The structure of young embedded protostellar discs
Benjamin A. MacFarlane, Dimitris Stamatellos

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic simulations to analyze the structure of young protostellar discs, highlighting how radiative feedback and gravitational instabilities influence their properties and the accuracy of mass estimates from observational data.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the impact of radiative feedback and gravitational instabilities on young disc structures and the limitations of PV diagram mass estimates.
Findings
Radial profiles vary significantly with infall and feedback regimes.
Position-velocity diagrams underestimate protostellar mass by up to 20%.
Young discs may experience increased dust depletion due to pressure gradients.
Abstract
Young protostellar discs provide the initial conditions for planet formation. The properties of these discs may be different from those of late-phase (T Tauri) discs due to continuing infall from the envelope and protostellar variability resulting from irregular gas accretion. We use a set of hydrodynamic simulations to determine the structure of discs forming in collapsing molecular clouds. We examine how radiative feedback from the host protostar affects the disc properties by examining three regimes: without radiative feedback, with continuous radiative feedback and with episodic feedback, similar to FU Ori-type outbursts. We find that the radial surface density and temperature profiles vary significantly as the disc accretes gas from the infalling envelope. These profiles are sensitive to the presence of spiral structure, induced by gravitational instabilities, and the radiative…
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