Spin-down of solar-mass protostars in magnetospheric accretion paradigm
Shinsuke Takasao, Masanobu Kunitomo, Takeru K. Suzuki, Kazunari, Iwasaki, Kengo Tomida

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new 3D magnetohydrodynamic model showing that conical disk winds driven by stellar magnetospheres effectively spin down solar-mass protostars, challenging previous assumptions about stellar wind requirements.
Contribution
It presents a novel 3D simulation-based mechanism for protostellar spin-down via conical disk winds, reducing reliance on massive stellar winds or highly variable ejections.
Findings
Failed magnetospheric winds reduce spin-up torque.
3D effects decrease variability of magnetospheric ejections.
Conical disk wind efficiently extracts angular momentum.
Abstract
Stellar spin is one of the fundamental quantities that characterize a star itself and its planetary system. Nevertheless, stellar spin-down mechanisms in protostellar and pre-main-sequence stellar phases have been a long-standing problem in the star formation theory. To realize the spin-down, previous axisymmetric models based on the conventional magnetospheric paradigm have to assume massive stellar winds or produce highly time-variable magnetospheric ejections. However, this picture has been challenged by both numerical simulations and observations. With a particular focus on the propeller regime for solar-mass stars, we propose a new picture of stellar spin-down based on our recent three-dimensional (3D) magnetohydrodynamic simulation and stellar evolution calculation. We show that failed magnetospheric winds, unique to 3D models, significantly reduce the spin-up accretion torque,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
