Abstract

Context. In the disc-mediated accretion scenario for the formation of the most massive stars, high densities and high accretion rates could induce gravitational instabilities in the disc, forcing it to fragment and produce companion objects. Aims. We investigate the effects of inclination and spatial resolution on the observable kinematics and stability of discs in high-mass star formation. Methods. We studied a high-resolution 3D radiation-hydrodynamic simulation that leads to the fragmentation of a massive disc. Using RADMC-3D we produced 1.3 mm continuum and CH3CN line cubes at different inclinations. The model was set to different distances, and synthetic observations were created for ALMA at ~80 mas resolution and NOEMA at ~0.4′′. Results. The synthetic ALMA observations resolve all fragments and their kinematics well. The synthetic NOEMA observations at 800 pc with linear resolution of ~300 au are able to resolve the fragments, while at 2000 pc with linear resolution of ~800 au only a single structure slightly elongated towards the brightest fragment is observed. The position–velocity (PV) plots show the differential rotation of material best in the edge-on views. A discontinuity is seen at a radius of ~250 au, corresponding to the position of the centrifugal barrier. As the observations become less resolved, the inner high-velocity components of the disc become blended with the envelope and the PV plots resemble rigid-body-like rotation. Protostellar mass estimates from PV plots of poorly resolved observations are therefore overestimated. We fit the emission of CH3CN (12K−11K) lines and produce maps of gas temperature with values in the range of 100–300 K. Studying the Toomre stability of the discs, we find low Q values below the critical value for stability against gravitational collapse at the positions of the fragments and in the arms connecting the fragments for the resolved observations. For the poorly resolved observations we find low Q values in the outskirts of the disc. Therefore, although we could not resolve any of the fragments, we are able to predict that the disc is unstable and fragmenting. This conclusion is valid regardless of our knowledge about the inclination of the disc. Conclusions. These synthetic observations reveal the potential and limitations of studying discs in high-mass star formation with current (millimetre) interferometers. While the extremely high spatial resolution of ALMA reveals objects in extraordinary detail, rotational structures and instabilities within accretion discs can also be identified in poorly resolved observations.

Highlights

  • High-mass stars (M 8 M ) live short and violent lives, ejecting a significant amount of mechanical and radiative energy into the Universe, enriching the interstellar medium with the heavy material needed for the creation of organic life as we know it

  • We report on our study of the kinematics and stability of high-mass protostellar discs in detail; we created synthetic observations for the highest resolution 3D radiation-hydrodynamic simulations that lead to the fragmentation of a massive disc

  • Smaller accretion discs are formed around each of the fragments, through which some of the large-scale disc and envelope material is accreted onto the fragments

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Summary

Introduction

High-mass stars (M 8 M ) live short and violent lives, ejecting a significant amount of mechanical and radiative energy into the Universe, enriching the interstellar medium with the heavy material needed for the creation of organic life as we know it. The distribution of gas in the synthetic NOEMA observations at 2000 pc are more symmetrically distributed than the dust emission, which has an elongated shape This occurs because the fraction of gas that is being accreted onto each of the fragments is completely washed out by the large beam, and the main contribution left is the larger scale disc component that is feeding the protostar at the centre. As we move to the synthetic NOEMA observations and the emission gets even more smeared in the position direction, the high-velocity components seen in the more inclined views become hard to detect and the Keplerian curve does not fit the observations well This is best seen in the synthetic NOEMA observations at 2000 pc where the inner disc and envelope contributions are completely blended and the resulting PV plots more closely resemble rigid-body rotation than differential rotation, similar to many observational data sets in the last decade at comparable resolutions. We describe the different techniques often used in observations for determining core and protostellar masses

Masses from dust emission
Findings
Protostellar masses from PV plots
Full Text
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