Title: Star and Planet Formation
1Star and Planet Formation
Sommer term 2007 Henrik Beuther
Sebastian Wolf
16.4 Introduction (H.B. S.W.) 23.4 Physical
processes, heating and cooling, radiation
transfer (H.B.) 30.4 Gravitational collapse
early protostellar evolution I (H.B.) 07.5
Gravitational collapse early protostellar
evolution II (H.B.) 14.5 Protostellar and
pre-main sequence evolution (H.B.) 21.5 Outflows
and jets (H.B.) 28.5 Pfingsten (no lecture) 04.6
Clusters, the initial mass function (IMF),
massive star formation (H.B.) 11.6 Protoplanetary
disks Observations models I (S.W.) 18.6 Gas in
disks, molecules, chemistry, keplerian motions
(H.B.) 25.6 Protoplanetary disks Observations
models II (S.W.) 02.7 Accretion, transport
processes, local structure and stability
(S.W.) 09.7 Planet formation scenarios
(S.W.) 16.7 Extrasolar planets Searching for
other worlds (S.W.) 23.7 Summary and open
questions (H.B. S.W.)
More Information and the current lecture files
http//www.mpia.de/homes/beuther/lecture_ss07.html
and http//www.mpia.de/homes
/swolf/vorlesung/sommer2007.html
Emails beuther_at_mpia.de, swolf_at_mpia.de
2Summary last week
- The first core contracts until temperatures
are able to dissociate H2 to H. - H-region spreads outward, T and P not high
enough to maintain equilibrium, - further collapse until H gets collisionally
ionized. The dynamically stable - protostar has formed.
- - Accretion luminosity. Definition of low-mass
protostar can be mass-gaining - object where the luminosity is dominated by
accretion. - - Structure of the protostellar envelope and
effects of rotation. - - Stellar structure equations follow numerically
the protostellar and then - later the pre-main sequence evolution.
- Convection and deuterium burning.
- End of protostellar/beginning or pre-main
sequence evolution --gt birthline. - Pre-main sequence evolution in the
Hertzsprung-Russel (HR) diagram. - Connection of HR diagram with protostellar and
pre-main sequence - class scheme.
3Star Formation Paradigm
4Discovery of outflows I
Initially thought to be embedded protostars but
soon spectra were recognized as caused by shock
waves --gt jets and outflows
5Discovery of outflows II
- In the mid to late 70th, first CO non-Gaussian
line wing emission detected - (Kwan Scovile 1976).
- - Bipolar structures, extremely energetic, often
associated with HH objects
6HH30, a disk-outflow system
7Outflow multiplicities in Orion
8The prototypical molecular outflow HH211
9Jet entrainment in HH211
- Warmer gas closer to source
- Jet like SiO emission has always
- larger velocities than CO at the
- same projected distance from
- the driving protostar
From Hirano et al. 2006, Palau et al. 2006,
Chandler Richer 2001, Gueth et al. 1999, Shang
et al. 2006
10IRAS 201264104
Lebron et al. 2006
11Mass vs.velocity, energy vs. velocity
- Mass-velocity relation exhibits broken
power-law, steeper further out - Energy at high velocities of the same magnitude
than at low velocities
Lebron et al. 2006
12Outflow/jet precession
13Jet rotation in DG Tau
Testi et al. 2002
Corotation of disk and jet
Bacciotti et al. 2002
14General outflow properties
- Jet velocities 100-500 km/s ltgt Outflow
velocities 10-50 km/s - Estimated dynamical ages between 103 and 105
years - Size between 0.1 and 1 pc
- Force provided by stellar radiation too low
(middle panel) - --gt non-radiative processes necessary!
Mass vs. L
Force vs. L
Outflow rate vs. L
Wu et al. 2004, 2005
15Collimation degrees
Collimation degrees (length/width) vary between 1
and 10
16Collimation and pv-structure
HH212 consistent with jet-driving
VLA0548 consistent with wind-driving
- pv-structure of jet- and wind-driven models very
different - Often Hubble-law observed --gt increasing
velocity with increasing distance -
from the protostar
Lee et al. 2001
17Outflow entrainment models I
Basically 4 outflow entrainment models are
discussed in the literature Turbulent jet
entrainment model - Working surfaces at the
jet boundary layer caused by Kelvin-Helmholtz
instabilities form viscous mixing layer
entraining molecular gas. --gt The mixing
layer grows with time and whole outflow gets
turbulent. - Broken power-law of
mass-velocity relation is reproduced, but
velocity decreases with distance from
source --gt opposite to observations Jet-bow
shock model - As jet impact on ambient gas,
bow shocks are formed at head of jet. High
pressure gas is ejected sideways, creating a
broader bow shock entraining the ambient
gas. Episodic ejection produces chains of knots
and shocks. - Numerical modeling reproduce
many observables, e.g. Hubble-law.
18Jet simulations I
3-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations, including
H, C and O chemistry and cooling of the gas, this
is a pulsed jet.
Rosen Smith 2004
19Jet simulations II small precession
Rosen Smith 2004
20Jet simulations III, large precession
Rosen Smith 2004
21Outflow entrainment models II
Wide-angle wind model - A wide-angle wind
blows into ambient gas forming a thin swept-up
shell. Different degrees of collimation
can be explained by different density
structures of the ambient gas. - Attractive
models for older and low collimated
outflows. Circulation model -
Molecular gas is not entrained by underlying jet
or wind, but it is rather infalling gas
that was deflected from the central protostar in
a region of high MHD pressure. - This
model was proposed to explain also massive
outflows because it was originally
considered difficult to entrain that large
amounts of gas. Maybe not necessary today
anymore
22Outflow entrainment models III
Arce et al. 2002
23Jet launching
- Large consensus that outflows are likely driven
by magneto- - centrifugal winds from open magnetic field
lines anchored on - rotating circumstellar accretion disks.
- Two main competing theories disk winds ltgt
X-winds - Are they launched from a very small area of the
disk close to the - truncation radius (X-wind), or over larger
areas of the disk (disk wind)?
24Jet-launching Disk winds I
Banerjee Pudritz 2006
- Infalling core pinches magnetic field.
- If poloidal magnetic field component
- has angle larger 30 from vertical,
- centrifugal forces can launch matter-
- loaded wind along field lines from disk
- surface.
- Wind transports away from 60 to 100
- of disk angular momentum.
Recent review Pudritz et al. 2006
25Jet-launching Disk winds II
t1.3x105 yr
t9.66x105 yr
Toroidal magnetic field
- On larger scales, a strong toroidal
- magnetic field builds up during collapse.
- At large radii (outside Alfven radius rA, the
- radius where kin. energy equals magn.
- energy) Bf/Bp much larger than 1
- --gt collimation via Lorentz-force FLjzBf
Banerjee Pudritz 2006
26X-winds
- The wind is launched magneto-centrifugally from
the inner - co-rotation radius of the accretion disk
(0.03AU)
27Jet-launching points and angular momenta
- From toroidal and poloidal velocities, one
- infers footpoints r0, where gas comes from
- --gt outer r0 for the blue and red wing are
- about 0.4 and 1.6 AU (lower limits)
- --gt consistent with disk winds
- About 2/3 of the disk angular momentum
- may be carried away by jet.
Woitas et al. 2005
28Impact on surrounding cloud
- Entrain large amounts of cloud mass with high
energies. - Potentially partly responsible to maintain
turbulence in cloud. - Can finally disrupt the cores to stop any
further accretion. - Can erode the clouds and alter their velocity
structure. - May trigger collapse in neighboring cores.
- Via shock interactions heat the cloud.
- Alter the chemical properties.
29Outflow chemistry
Bachiller et al. 2001
30Summary
- Outflows and jets are ubiquitous and necessary
phenomena - in star formation.
- Transport angular momentum away from protostar.
- The are likely formed by magneto-centrifugal
disk-winds. - Collimation is caused by Lorentz forces.
- Gas entrainment can be due to various processes
turbulent - entrainment, bow-shocks, wide-angle winds,
circulation - They inject significant amounts of energy in the
ISM, may be - important to maintain turbulence.
- Disrupt at some stage their maternal clouds.
- Often point back to the forming star
31Star and Planet Formation
Sommer term 2007 Henrik Beuther
Sebastian Wolf
16.4 Introduction (H.B. S.W.) 23.4 Physical
processes, heating and cooling, radiation
transfer (H.B.) 30.4 Gravitational collapse
early protostellar evolution I (H.B.) 07.5
Gravitational collapse early protostellar
evolution II (H.B.) 14.5 Protostellar and
pre-main sequence evolution (H.B.) 21.5 Outflows
and jets (H.B.) 28.5 Pfingsten (no lecture) 04.6
Clusters, the initial mass function (IMF),
massive star formation (H.B.) 11.6 Protoplanetary
disks Observations models I (S.W.) 18.6 Gas in
disks, molecules, chemistry, keplerian motions
(H.B.) 25.6 Protoplanetary disks Observations
models II (S.W.) 02.7 Accretion, transport
processes, local structure and stability
(S.W.) 09.7 Planet formation scenarios
(S.W.) 16.7 Extrasolar planets Searching for
other worlds (S.W.) 23.7 Summary and open
questions (H.B. S.W.)
More Information and the current lecture files
http//www.mpia.de/homes/beuther/lecture_ss07.html
and http//www.mpia.de/homes
/swolf/vorlesung/sommer2007.html
Emails beuther_at_mpia.de, swolf_at_mpia.de