Two-dimensional modeling of density and thermal structure of dense circumstellar outflowing disks
Petr Kurf\"urst, Achim Feldmeier, Ji\v{r}\'i Krti\v{c}ka

TL;DR
This paper models the density and thermal structure of dense, outflowing circumstellar disks around massive stars using 2D hydrodynamic simulations, revealing high central temperatures and complex density features.
Contribution
It introduces a novel 2D modeling approach for dense circumstellar disks, incorporating full Navier-Stokes viscosity and thermal structure calculations.
Findings
Viscous heating dominates the central disk regions.
High viscosity increases the central temperature to tens of thousands of Kelvins.
Instabilities cause waves and bumps in density and temperature.
Abstract
Context. Evolution of massive stars is affected by a significant loss of mass either via (nearly) spherically symmetric stellar winds or by aspherical mass-loss mechanisms, namely the outflowing equatorial disks. However, the scenario that leads to the formation of a disk or rings of gas and dust around massive stars is still under debate. Aims. We study the hydrodynamic and thermal structure of optically thick, dense parts of outflowing circumstellar disks that may be formed around various types of critically rotating massive stars, for example, Be stars, B[e] supergiant (sgB[e]) stars or Pop III stars. Methods. We specify the optical depth of the disk along the line-of-sight from stellar poles. Within the optically thick dense region we calculate the vertical disk thermal structure using the diffusion approximation while for the optically thin outer layers we assume a local…
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