4.7 Article

Supermassive star formation via episodic accretion: protostellar disc instability and radiative feedback efficiency

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 459, Issue 2, Pages 1137-1145

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stw637

Keywords

stars: formation; galaxies: formation; cosmology: theory; early Universe

Funding

  1. Advanced Leading Graduate Course for Photon Science
  2. Russian Ministry of Education and Science [3.961.2014/K]
  3. JSPS-OEAD [21402003]
  4. Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan [15H00776, 25800102, 25287040, 25287050]
  5. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [25800102, 15J08816, 15H00776, 25287040] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The formation of supermassive stars (SMSs) is a potential pathway to seed supermassive black holes in the early universe. A critical issue for forming SMSs is stellar UV feedback, which may limit the stellar mass growth via accretion. In this paper, we study the evolution of an accreting SMS and its UV emissivity with realistic variable accretion from a circumstellar disc. First we conduct a 2D hydrodynamical simulation to follow the protostellar accretion until the stellar mass exceeds 10(4) M-aS (TM). The disc fragments by gravitational instability, creating many clumps that migrate inward to fall on to the star. The resulting accretion history is highly time-dependent: short episodic accretion bursts are followed by longer quiescent phases. We show that the disc for the direct collapse model is more unstable and generates greater variability than normal Pop III cases. Next, we conduct a stellar evolution calculation using the obtained accretion history. Our results show that, regardless of the variable accretion, the stellar radius monotonically increases with almost constant effective temperature atT(eff) a parts per thousand integral 5000 K as the stellar mass increases. The resulting UV feedback is too weak to hinder accretion due to the low flux of stellar UV photons. The insensitivity of stellar evolution to variable accretion is attributed to the fact that time-scales of variability, a parts per thousand(2)10(3) yr, are too short to affect the stellar structure. We argue that this evolution will continue until the SMS collapses to produce a black hole by the general relativistic instability after the mass reaches a parts per thousand(3)10(5) M-circle dot.

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