Failed and delayed protostellar outflows with high mass accretion rates
Masahiro N. Machida, Takashi Hosokawa

TL;DR
This study uses 3D magnetohydrodynamic simulations to explore how magnetic field strength influences the evolution and success of protostellar outflows at high mass accretion rates, impacting high-mass star formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates the critical role of magnetic field strength in outflow development and high-mass star formation, revealing conditions under which outflows are delayed or fail.
Findings
Strong magnetic fields ($B_0 \,\gtrsim\, B_{0,cr}$) produce powerful outflows.
Weak magnetic fields lead to delayed or failed outflows during high accretion.
Failed outflows form magnetic-pressure-supported structures around the protostar.
Abstract
The evolution of protostellar outflows is investigated under different mass accretion rates in the range yr with three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic simulations. A powerful outflow always appears in strongly magnetized clouds with , where is the cloud mass. When a cloud has a weaker magnetic field, the outflow does not evolve promptly with a high mass accretion rate. In some cases with moderate magnetic fields slightly smaller than , the outflow growth is suppressed or delayed until the infalling envelope dissipates and the ram pressure around the protostellar system is significantly reduced. In such an environment, the outflow begins to grow and reaches a large distance only during the late accretion phase. On the other hand, the…
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