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Jets from Low Mass Accreting Stars

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2017

F. D. Kahn*
Affiliation:
Department of Astronomy, The University, Manchester M13 9PL, England

Extract

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There is excellent evidence that jets originate in protostars of low mass (M ∼ M). Flow speeds are typically of order a few 100 km s−1; the energy for the motion must be generated close to or below the stellar surface, where the escape velocity is of the same order. Here it will be argued that the origin of the jets is connected with the thermodynamics of the accreted gas as it settles towards equilibrium. At some distance below the photosphere, in a spherically symmetrical star, the opacity of the material becomes so high that the outward flow of radiant energy is too slow to balance the inward convection of thermal energy. Consequently there can be no equilibrium, and the symmetry must be broken. The occurrence of jets can be led back to this effect, and the power required to drive them restores the energy balance.

Type
I. Star Forming Processes in the Solar Neighborhood
Copyright
Copyright © Reidel 1987