Massive stars, disks, and clustered star formation | | Posted on:2009-02-28 | Degree:Ph.D | Type:Thesis | | University:University of Colorado at Boulder | Candidate:Moeckel, Nickolas Barry | Full Text:PDF | | GTID:2440390005960395 | Subject:Physics | | Abstract/Summary: | PDF Full Text Request | | The formation of an isolated massive star is inherently more complex than the relatively well-understood collapse of an isolated, low-mass star. The dense, clustered environment where massive stars are predominantly found further complicates the picture, and suggests that interactions with other stars may play an important role in the early life of these objects. In this thesis we present the results of numerical hydrodynamic experiments investigating interactions between a massive protostar and its lower-mass cluster siblings. We explore the impact of these interactions on the orientation of disks and outflows, which are potentially observable indications of encounters during the formation of a star. We show that these encounters efficiently form eccentric binary systems, and in clusters similar to Orion they occur frequently enough to contribute to the high multiplicity of massive stars. We suggest that the massive protostar in Cepheus A is currently undergoing a series of interactions, and present simulations tailored to that system.; We also apply the numerical techniques used in the massive star investigations to a much lower-mass regime, the formation of planetary systems around Solar-mass stars. We perform a small number of illustrative planet-planet scattering experiments, which have been used to explain the eccentricity distribution of extrasolar planets. We add the complication of a remnant gas disk, and show that this feature has the potential to stabilize the system against strong encounters between planets. We present preliminary simulations of Bondi-Hoyle accretion onto a protoplanetary disk, and consider the impact of the flow on the disk properties as well as the impact of the disk on the accretion flow. | | Keywords/Search Tags: | Massive, Star, Disk, Formation | PDF Full Text Request | Related items |
| |
|