Research Achievements

Shingo NOZAKI (Graduate School of Science) paper has been accepted for The Astrophysical Journal

Shingo NOZAKI (Graduate School of Science) paper has been accepted for The Astrophysical Journal.
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Authors
Shingo Nozaki, Masahiro N. Machida

Affiliation
Graduate School of Science, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences

Manuscript Title
How the External Medium Outside Prestellar Cores Affects Protostellar Growth: Variations in Accretion Rate and Evolution of Disks and Outflows

Abstract
We investigate how the external medium surrounding prestellar cores affects the star formation process by conducting three-dimensional resistive magnetohydrodynamic simulations. The initial cores follow critical Bonnor–Ebert profiles and are embedded in environments with different ambient densities. The simulations follow the evolution at least until the envelope mass within a radius equal to twice the critical Bonnor–Ebert radius drops to 35% of the initial cloud mass. We reveal that in environments with higher external density, enhanced mass inflow from the envelope leads to Bondi-like accretion as the protostellar mass increases. The continued inflow substantially increases the final stellar mass, resulting in star formation efficiencies that appear to exceed unity in dense environments. The external medium also influences the evolution of circumstellar disks and protostellar outflows: with the high-density external medium, disks grow rapidly, but their mass becomes smaller relative to the protostellar mass, and the outflow is sustained over a long duration. However, the ratio of angular momentum removed by outflows and magnetic braking to that introduced by inflowing gas decreases with increasing external density. These results suggest that the density of the external medium regulates not only protostellar mass growth but also the inflow–outflow balance and angular momentum transport in magnetized, rotating star-forming cores.

Journal name
The Astrophysical Journal

Relevant SDGs
SDGs 4(Quality education), SDGs 9(Industry, Innovation, Technology and Infrastructure)
SDGS 17(Partnerships for the goals)

Comments 
I am Shingo Nozaki, a second-year PhD student in the Graduate School of Science. My research focus on large-scale numerical simulations of star formation. Using three-dimensional non-ideal magnetohydrodynamic numerical calculations, I have quantitatively shown that the density profile of the surrounding environment regulates not only the mass growth of the protostar but also the evolution of its circumstellar disk and outflow.
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Shingo NOZAKI (Graduate School of Science)
K²-SPRING student selected in FY2024