Accretion bursts in low-metallicity protostellar disks
E. I. Vorobyov (1,2,3), V. G. Elbakyan (3), K. Omukai (4), T. Hosokawa, (5), R. Matsukoba (4), and M. Guedel (1) ((1) University of Vienna,, Department of Astrophysics, Vienna, 1180, Austria, (2) Ural Federal, University, 51 Lenin Str., 620051 Ekaterinburg, Russia, (3) Research

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic simulations to explore how low metallicity affects the early evolution, gravitational instability, and episodic accretion bursts in protostellar disks, revealing more vigorous instability and variability compared to higher metallicity systems.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of gravitational instability and episodic accretion in low-metallicity protostellar disks using numerical hydrodynamics simulations.
Findings
Low-metallicity disks exhibit vigorous gravitational instability and fragmentation.
Protostellar accretion in low-metallicity disks is highly variable with energetic bursts.
Episodic accretion is common in disks with metallicities up to 0.01 Z_sun.
Abstract
The early evolution of protostellar disks with metallicities in the range was studied with a particular emphasis on the strength of gravitational instability and the nature of protostellar accretion in low-metallicity systems. Numerical hydrodynamics simulations in the thin-disk limit were employed that feature separate gas and dust temperatures, and disk mass-loading from the infalling parental cloud cores. Models with cloud cores of similar initial mass and rotation pattern, but distinct metallicity were considered to distinguish the effect of metallicity from that of initial conditions. The early stages of disk evolution in low-metallicity models are characterized by vigorous gravitational instability and fragmentation. Disk instability is sustained by continual mass-loading from the collapsing core. The time period that is covered by this unstable stage is much…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · High-pressure geophysics and materials
