7 research outputs found
Radiation shielding of protoplanetary discs in young star-forming regions
Protoplanetary discs spend their lives in the dense environment of a star
forming region. While there, they can be affected by nearby stars through
external photoevaporation and dynamic truncations. We present simulations that
use the AMUSE framework to couple the Torch model for star cluster formation
from a molecular cloud with a model for the evolution of protoplanetary discs
under these two environmental processes. We compare simulations with and
without extinction of photoevaporation-driving radiation. We find that the
majority of discs in our simulations are considerably shielded from
photoevaporation-driving radiation for at least 0.5 Myr after the formation of
the first massive stars. Radiation shielding increases disc lifetimes by an
order of magnitude and can let a disc retain more solid material for planet
formation. The reduction in external photoevaporation leaves discs larger and
more easily dynamically truncated, although external photoevaporation remains
the dominant mass loss process. Finally, we find that the correlation between
disc mass and projected distance to the most massive nearby star (often
interpreted as a sign of external photoevaporation) can be erased by the
presence of less massive stars that dominate their local radiation field.
Overall, we find that the presence and dynamics of gas in embedded clusters
with massive stars is important for the evolution of protoplanetary discs.Comment: 23 pages, 22 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRA
Radiation shielding of protoplanetary discs in young star-forming regions
Interstellar matter and star formatio
The effects of early massive star formation: gas expulsion & cluster dynamics
Interstellar matter and star formatio
Early-forming massive stars suppress star formation and hierarchical cluster assembly
Interstellar matter and star formatio
Early-forming Massive Stars Suppress Star Formation and Hierarchical Cluster Assembly
Feedback from massive stars plays an important role in the formation of star clusters. Whether a very massive star is born early or late in the cluster formation timeline has profound implications for the star cluster formation and assembly processes. We carry out a controlled experiment to characterize the effects of early-forming massive stars on star cluster formation. We use the star formation software suite Torch , combining self-gravitating magnetohydrodynamics, ray-tracing radiative transfer, N -body dynamics, and stellar feedback, to model four initially identical 10 ^4 M _⊙ giant molecular clouds with a Gaussian density profile peaking at 521.5 cm ^−3 . Using the Torch software suite through the AMUSE framework, we modify three of the models, to ensure that the first star that forms is very massive (50, 70, and 100 M _⊙ ). Early-forming massive stars disrupt the natal gas structure, resulting in fast evacuation of the gas from the star-forming region. The star formation rate is suppressed, reducing the total mass of the stars formed. Our fiducial control model, without an early massive star, has a larger star formation rate and total efficiency by up to a factor of 3, and a higher average star formation efficiency per freefall time by up to a factor of 7. Early-forming massive stars promote the buildup of spatially separate and gravitationally unbound subclusters, while the control model forms a single massive cluster