Testing Magnetic Star Formation Theory
Richard M. Crutcher, Nicholas Hakobian, and Thomas H. Troland

TL;DR
This study measures magnetic flux ratios in molecular clouds to test star formation theories, finding results inconsistent with the idealized ambipolar diffusion model and supporting turbulence-driven models.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence challenging the idealized ambipolar diffusion theory by measuring magnetic flux ratios in four molecular clouds.
Findings
Ratios R of core to envelope M/Phi are less than 1 in all clouds.
Results strongly contradict the idealized ambipolar diffusion model.
Supports turbulence-driven star formation models with R < 1.
Abstract
We report here observations of the Zeeman effect in the 18-cm lines of OH in the envelope regions surrounding four molecular cloud cores toward which detections of B(LOS) have been achieved in the same lines, and evaluate the ratio of mass to magnetic flux, M/Phi, between the cloud core and envelope. This relative M/Phi measurement reduces uncertainties in previous studies, such as the angle between B and the line of sight and the value of [OH/H]. Our result is that for all four clouds, the ratios R of the core to the envelope values of M/Phi are less than 1. Stated another way, the ratios R' of the core to the total cloud M/Phi are less than 1. The extreme case or idealized (no turbulence) ambipolar diffusion theory of core formation requires the ratio of the central to total M/Phi to be approximately equal to the inverse of the original subcritical M/Phi, or R' > 1. The probability…
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