EPoS
EPoS Contribution
The Burst Mode of Protostellar Accretion

Eduard Vorobyov
The University of Western Ontario, London, Canada
We present numerical simulations of the newly discovered burst mode of protostellar accretion. The burst mode begins upon the formation of a centrifugally balanced disk around a newly formed protostar. It is comprised of prolonged quiescent periods of low accretion rate (typically 10^{-7} Msun/yr) which are punctuated by intense bursts of accretion (typically 10^{- 4} Msun/yr, with duration <100 yr) during which most of the protostellar mass is accumulated. The accretion bursts are associated with the formation of dense protostellar/protoplanetary embryos, which are later driven onto the protostar by the gravitational torques that develop in the disk. Like the process of throwing logs into a fireplace, these episodes of embryo infall produce excess energy which cause the protostar to temporarily brighten by a factor of hundreds to thousands. The burst phenomenon is robust enough to occur for a variety of initial values of rotation rate, frozen-in (supercritical) magnetic field, and density-temperature relations. We conclude that most (if not all) protostars undergo a burst mode of evolution during their early accretion history, as also inferred from observations of FU Orionis variables.