Rejuvenating infall: a crucial yet overlooked source of mass and angular momentum
M. Kuffmeier, S. S. Jensen, T. Haugb{\o}lle

TL;DR
This study uses MHD simulations to explore how late infall events significantly influence the mass and angular momentum of protostars, revealing diverse accretion histories and their impact on disk formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into the role of late infall in protostar evolution, highlighting its effect on angular momentum and disk size, which was previously overlooked.
Findings
Late infall contributes over 50% of final stellar mass in some cases.
Stars with substantial late infall have higher angular momentum budgets.
Large disks are associated with recent infall events.
Abstract
MHD models and the observation of accretion streamers confirmed that protostars can undergo late accretion events after the initial collapse phase. To provide better constraints, we study the evolution of stellar masses in MHD simulations of a (4 pc)^3 molecular cloud. Tracer particles allow us to accurately follow the trajectory of accreting material for all protostars and thereby constrain the accretion reservoir of the stars. The diversity of the accretion process implies that stars in the solar mass regime can have vastly different accretion histories. Some stars accrete most of their mass during the initial collapse phase, while others gain >50 % of their final mass from late infall. The angular momentum budget of stars that experience substantial infall, so-called late accretors, is significantly higher than for stars without or with only little late accretion. As the probability…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Phase Equilibria and Thermodynamics · Astro and Planetary Science
