ArXiv TLDR

On the origin of the rotation of massive stars

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2605.06872

André Oliva, Facundo D. Moyano, Luca Sciarini, Sylvia Ekström, Patrick Eggenberger + 1 more

astro-ph.SRastro-ph.GA

TLDR

Protostellar jets, driven by magnetic fields, are found to be the primary mechanism determining the rotation rates of massive stars by removing angular momentum.

Key contributions

  • Simulated massive star formation using 2D radiation-gravito-magnetohydrodynamical models.
  • Demonstrated that magnetically-driven protostellar jets effectively transport angular momentum outwards.
  • Showed this angular momentum removal keeps protostars below critical rotation speeds.
  • Linked jet strength and final stellar rotation rates to initial star formation conditions.

Why it matters

This research provides a novel explanation for the origin of massive star rotation, a long-standing astrophysical puzzle. It demonstrates that protostellar jets, not star-disk interactions, regulate angular momentum, offering a distinct mechanism from low-mass stars. This work helps explain the observed diversity in massive star rotation rates.

Original Abstract

We explore the origin of the rotation rates of massive stars. Contrary to their low-mass siblings, most massive stars do not have detectable magnetic fields, so that star-disk interaction models used for the formation of rotating low-mass stars do not apply. We investigate whether the magnetic fields of protostellar jets present in the parent molecular cloud prevent the protostar from reaching the critical angular velocity. Starting from the gravitational collapse of a molecular cloud, we run two two-dimensional radiation-gravito-magnetohydroynamical simulations to study the formation of an accretion disk and the launching of magnetically-driven protostellar outflows (of particular interest is the formation of a magnetocentrifugal jet originating from the protostar and inner disk). We then study the angular momentum transfer from the disk and jet onto the protostar. Finally, we compute one-dimensional stellar evolution models of the pre-main sequence including our results from the disk-jet simulations and follow the angular momentum redistribution within the structure of the protostar. We find that the angular momentum transported outwards by the magnetically-driven protostellar outflows is sufficient for keeping the protostar below the critical speed at all times. Moreover, we are able to link the strength of the jet, and thus the rotation rate at the end of the accretion epoch, to the initial conditions for star formation. Our results show that the jet strength produces a variety of stellar rotation rates, suggesting that protostellar jets fix the rotation rate of massive stars.

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