Protostellar half-life: new methodology and estimates
L.E. Kristensen, M.M. Dunham

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new methodology based on nuclear decay formalism to estimate the lifetimes of protostellar stages, providing more accurate age distributions and insights into star formation timescales.
Contribution
It proposes a novel approach to determine protostellar stage durations using a decay-based statistical model, moving beyond steady-state assumptions.
Findings
Class 0 half-life: 47±4 kyr
Class I half-life: 88±7 kyr
Flat sources half-life: 87±8 kyr
Abstract
(Abridged) Protostellar systems evolve from prestellar cores, through the deeply embedded stage and then disk-dominated stage, before they end up on the main sequence. Knowing how much time a system spends in each stage is crucial for understanding how stars and associated planetary systems form, because a key constraint is the time available to form such systems. Equally important is understanding what the spread in these time scales is. The most commonly used method for inferring protostellar ages is to assume the lifetime of one evolutionary stage, and then scale this to the relative number of protostars in the other stages, i.e., assuming steady state. This method does not account for the underlying age distribution and apparent stochasticity of star formation, nor that relative populations are not in steady state. To overcome this, we propose a new scheme where the lifetime of each…
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