Cloudlet capture by Transitional Disk and FU Orionis stars
Cornelis Petrus Dullemond, Michael K\"uffmeier, Felipe Goicovic,, Misato Fukagawa, Veronika Oehl, Manuel Kramer

TL;DR
This paper explores how young stars can capture or be affected by small cloud fragments called cloudlets, leading to observable nebulosity shapes and possibly causing disk tilts or outbursts.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of cloudlet flyby and capture events around young stars and links these to observed nebulosity shapes and disk phenomena.
Findings
Reflection nebulosity shapes can indicate cloudlet interactions.
Cloudlet capture may cause disk tilting and warping.
Massive cloudlet events could trigger FU Orionis outbursts.
Abstract
After its formation, a young star spends some time traversing the molecular cloud complex in which it was born. It is therefore not unlikely that, well after the initial cloud collapse event which produced the star, it will encounter one or more low mass cloud fragments, which we call "cloudlets" to distinguish them from full-fledged molecular clouds. Some of this cloudlet material may accrete onto the star+disk system, while other material may fly by in a hyperbolic orbit. In contrast to the original cloud collapse event, this process will be a "cloudlet flyby" and/or "cloudlet capture" event: A Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton type accretion event, driven by the relative velocity between the star and the cloudlet. As we will show in this paper, if the cloudlet is small enough and has an impact parameter similar or less than (with being the approach velocity), such…
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