Description |
The formation of the highest mass stars is an enigmatic topic in astrophysics due to a singular problem put forth by theoreticians decades ago: that the radiation pressure during the early phases is powerful enough to halt, or even reverse the accretion of matter driven by gravitational collapse. Adaptive-mesh refinement radiation-hydrodynamics simulations using ORION code combined the physics from decades of theoretical foundation with modern computing power, and showed that radiation Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities in the outflow cavities can dissipate the radiation pressure, solving this major problem. I will present the first observational discovery of such instabilities in a luminous young stellar system and discuss its
properties.
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