Steady Wind-Blown Cavities within Infalling Rotating Envelopes: Application to the Broad Velocity Component in Young Protostars
Lichen Liang, Doug Johnstone, Sylvie Cabrit, Lars E. Kristensen

TL;DR
This paper models wind-blown cavities in infalling rotating envelopes around protostars, explaining broad velocity components observed in molecular lines and matching observations with a physically consistent set of parameters.
Contribution
It introduces a self-similar steady-state model of wind-infall interaction that explains broad velocity components in protostars, validated against Herschel observations.
Findings
Model accurately reproduces observed line profiles and cavity widths.
Inferred ejection-to-accretion ratio aligns with disk wind theories.
Provides a framework applicable to various astrophysical outflow scenarios.
Abstract
Wind-driven outflows are observed around a broad range of accreting objects throughout the Universe, ranging from forming low-mass stars to super-massive black holes. We study the interaction between a central isotropic wind and an infalling, rotating, envelope, determining the steady-state cavity shape formed at their interface under the assumption of weak mixing. The shape of the resulting wind-blown cavity is elongated and self-similar, with a physical size determined by the ratio between wind ram pressure and envelope thermal pressure. We compute the growth of a warm turbulent mixing-layer between the shocked wind and the deflected envelope, and calculate the resultant broad line profile, under the assumption of a linear (Couette-type) velocity profile across the layer. We then test our model against the warm broad velocity component observed in CO =16--15 by Herschel/HIFI in the…
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