Parameter study for the burst mode of accretion in massive star formation
D. M.-A. Meyer (1), E. I. Vorobyov (2,3), V. G. Elbakyan (3), J., Eisloeffel (4), A. M. Sobolev (5), M. Stoehr (6,7) ((1) Institut fuer, Physik und Astronomie, Universitaet Potsdam, Germany (2) Department of, Astrophysics, The University of Vienna

TL;DR
This study investigates how initial cloud mass and rotation influence episodic accretion bursts in massive star formation, revealing that all modeled massive young stellar objects experience bursts, with bimodal timing linked to disc evolution.
Contribution
It provides a parameter study of hydrodynamical models showing how initial conditions affect burst behavior in massive star formation, highlighting the prevalence of bursts and their bimodal timing.
Findings
All modeled MYSOs experience accretion bursts.
Burst timing distribution is bimodal with short and long duration peaks.
Massive protostars accrete 40-60% of their mass via bursts.
Abstract
It is now a widely held view that, in their formation and early evolution, stars build up mass in bursts. The burst mode of star formation scenario proposes that the stars grow in mass via episodic accretion of fragments migrating from their gravitationally-unstable circumstellar discs and it naturally explains the existence of observed pre-main-sequence bursts from high mass protostars. We present a parameter study of hydrodynamical models of massive young stellar objects (MYSOs) that explores the initial masses of the collapsing clouds (Mc = 60-200Mo) and ratio of rotational-to-gravitational energies (beta = 0:005-0:33). An increase in Mc and/or beta produces protostellar accretion discs that are more prone to develop gravitational instability and to experience bursts. We find that all MYSOs have bursts even if their pre-stellar core is such that beta <= 0.01. Within our assumptions,…
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