The Dynamics of Infall and Accretion Shocks in the Outer Disk
Susan Terebey, Loraine Sandoval Ascencio, Lizxandra Flores-Rivera, Neal Turner, Andrew Barajas

TL;DR
This paper introduces the shock twist-angle Keplerian (STAK) disk model to analyze infall and accretion shocks in young stellar disks, demonstrating how shocks influence observable spectral line features and providing evidence from ALMA data.
Contribution
The paper develops a theoretical framework connecting infalling envelope gas and the disk via shocks, and shows how these shocks can be detected through spectral line asymmetries in observations.
Findings
Shocks cause detectable asymmetries in molecular spectral lines.
The STAK model predicts observable features in ALMA data.
Archival ALMA data shows signatures consistent with shock-induced structures.
Abstract
High-spatial-resolution observations of disks around young stars suggest planetary systems begin forming early, during the protostellar phase (< 1 Myr) when stars accrete most of their mass via infall from the surrounding cloud. During this era shocks are expected to be ubiquitous around the gaseous accretion disk due to supersonic infall that strikes the disk. We investigate the role of shocks using a theoretical and modeling framework we call the shock twist-angle Keplerian (STAK) disk, connecting the disk and infalling envelope gas via a shock using general physical principles. Briefly, at the shock, energy is dissipated while angular momentum is conserved, so that the infalling gas must change direction sharply, yielding a bend or twist in the streamlines. The model's pre-shock gas follows free-fall parabolic trajectories, while the post-shock gas is on lower-energy, elliptical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Magnetic confinement fusion research · High-pressure geophysics and materials
