SIMBAD references

2011ApJ...730...32S - Astrophys. J., 730, 32 (2011/March-3)

The importance of episodic accretion for low-mass star formation.

STAMATELLOS D., WHITWORTH A.P. and HUBBER D.A.

Abstract (from CDS):

A star acquires much of its mass by accreting material from a disk. Accretion is probably not continuous but episodic. We have developed a method to include the effects of episodic accretion in simulations of star formation. Episodic accretion results in bursts of radiative feedback, during which a protostar is very luminous, and its surrounding disk is heated and stabilized. These bursts typically last only a few hundred years. In contrast, the lulls between bursts may last a few thousand years; during these lulls the luminosity of the protostar is very low, and its disk cools and fragments. Thus, episodic accretion enables the formation of low-mass stars, brown dwarfs, and planetary-mass objects by disk fragmentation. If episodic accretion is a common phenomenon among young protostars, then the frequency and duration of accretion bursts may be critical in determining the low-mass end of the stellar initial mass function.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): accretion, accretion disks - brown dwarfs - hydrodynamics - methods: numerical - radiative transfer - stars: formation - stars: low-mass - stars: protostars

Simbad objects: 2

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