4.6 Article

Modeling disks and magnetic outflows around a forming massive star I. Investigating the two-layer structure of the accretion disk

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 669, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202243835

Keywords

stars; massive - stars; formation - accretion; accretion disks - magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) - stars; jets

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The physical mechanisms during the formation of massive protostars are found to have a significant impact on the appearance, size, and aspect ratio of circumstellar disks. The study reveals that magnetic pressure can slightly increase the size of the accretion disk, while magnetic braking plays a more significant role in the inner parts of the disk. Different initial conditions can produce similar disk sizes and protostellar masses.
Context. Similar to their lower mass siblings, massive protostars can be expected to: (a) be surrounded by circumstellar disks, and (b) launch magnetically driven jets and outflows. The disk formation and global evolution is thereby controlled by advection of angular momentum from large scales, the efficiency of magnetic braking and the resistivity of the medium, and the internal thermal and magnetic pressures of the disk. Aims. We determine the dominant physical mechanisms that shape the appearance of these circumstellar disks, their sizes, and aspect ratios. Methods. We performed a series of 30 simulations of a massive star forming from the gravitational collapse of a molecular cloud threaded by an initially uniform magnetic field, starting from different values for the mass of the cloud, its initial density and rotation profiles, its rotational energy content, the magnetic field strength, and the resistivity of the material. The gas and dust was modeled with the methods of resistive magnetohydrodynamics, also considering radiation transport of thermal emission and self-gravity. We checked for the impact of spatial resolution in a dedicated convergence study. Results. After the initial infall phase dominated by the gravitational collapse, an accretion disk was formed, shortly followed by the launching of magnetically driven outflows. Two layers can be distinguished in the accretion disk: a thin layer, vertically supported by thermal pressure, and a thick layer, vertically supported by magnetic pressure. Both regions exhibit Keplerian-like rotation and grow outward over time. We observed the effects of magnetic braking in the inner similar to 50 au of the disk at late times in our fiducial case. The parameter study reveals that the size of the disk is mostly determined by the density and rotation profiles of the initial mass reservoir and not by the magnetic field strength. We find that the disk size and protostellar mass gain scale with the initial mass of the cloud. Magnetic pressure can slightly increase the size of the accretion disk, while magnetic braking is more relevant in the innermost parts of the disk as opposed to the outer disk. From the parameter study, we infer that multiple initial conditions for the onset of gravitational collapse are able to produce a given disk size and protostellar mass.

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