From Fragments to Flares: Migration, Tidal Disruption, and Observable Bursts in Massive Protostellar Disks
Vardan Elbakyan, Rolf Kuiper, André Oliva, Verena Wolf, Jochen Eislöffel + 2 more
TLDR
Resolving the inner disk in simulations of massive protostars reveals that fragment tidal disruption causes sharper, shorter accretion bursts consistent with observations.
Key contributions
- New 3D radiation-hydrodynamic simulations compare 30 AU vs 1 AU sink models for protostellar disks.
- Resolving the inner disk (1 AU sink) leads to faster fragment migration and complete tidal disruption.
- The 1 AU model produces shorter, sharper accretion bursts and stronger infrared emission, matching observations better.
- Suggests observed short bursts in massive protostars are due to tidal disruption of compact objects like second Larson cores.
Why it matters
This research highlights the critical importance of high-resolution simulations for accurately modeling protostellar disk dynamics. It explains observed short, intense bursts in massive protostars by linking them to tidal disruption of compact objects.
Original Abstract
We investigate how resolving the inner few astronomical units of a massive protostellar disk affects the migration, disruption, and accretion signatures of an inward-moving fragment. In particular, we aim to determine whether the predicted burst strength and duration depend on the adopted sink cell size. We present a new three-dimensional radiation-hydrodynamic simulation of a $\sim$5$M_{\odot}$ protostar surrounded by a self-gravitating disk, comparing the original 30 AU sink model to a refined model with a 1 AU sink that resolves the inner disk. The resulting gas structures are post-processed with radiative transfer calculations to derive synthetic photometry and multi-band images. Both simulations produce a major accretion burst as a migrating fragment is tidally disrupted, but their detailed behavior differs markedly. The refined model shows faster migration, a complete tidal disruption of the fragment, and a shorter, sharper outburst (more consistent with observations) with nearly the same peak accretion rate as the 30 AU model, which yields a broader, smoother event. The refined run produces much stronger near- and mid-infrared emission, reflecting the formation of a compact, hot inner disk. Resolving the inner few AU qualitatively changes the dynamics and observable appearance of fragment-driven bursts. Diffuse fragment disruption can reproduce decade-long events, but the much shorter ($<$3 yr) bursts observed in some massive protostars likely require the tidal disruption of more compact objects such as second Larson cores. Our trajectory analysis indicates that second Larson cores can migrate sufficiently close to the star to be tidally destroyed, offering a plausible mechanism for the fastest FU-Ori-like bursts observed in massive protostars.
📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest
Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.