First Direct Simulation of Brown Dwarf Formation in a Compact Cloud Core
Masahiro N. Machida, Shu-ichiro Inutsuka, Tomoaki Matsumoto

TL;DR
This study presents the first direct simulation of brown dwarf formation within a compact cloud core, revealing the roles of outflows and magnetic fields in star formation efficiency and resulting in brown dwarf masses.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation of brown dwarf formation in a compact cloud, highlighting the importance of outflows and magnetic fields in the process.
Findings
Outflows emerge before protostar formation and persist throughout the simulation.
Star formation efficiency is approximately 20%.
Most of the mass is ejected or escapes, with only a small fraction forming the brown dwarf.
Abstract
Brown dwarf formation and star formation efficiency are studied using a nested grid simulation that covers five orders of magnitude in spatial scale (10^4 - 0.1AU). Starting with a rotating magnetized compact cloud with a mass of 0.22 M_sun, we follow the cloud evolution until the end of main accretion phase. Outflow of about 5 km/s emerges about 100 yr before the protostar formation and does not disappear until the end of the calculation. The mass accretion rate declines from 10^-6 M_sun/yr to 10^-8 - 10^-12 M_sun/yr in a short time (about 10^4 yr) after the protostar formation. This is because (1) a large fraction of mass is ejected from the host cloud by the protostellar outflow and (2) the gas escapes from the host cloud by the thermal pressure. At the end of the calculation, 74% (167 M_Jup) of the total mass (225 M_Jup) is outflowing from the protostar, in which 34% (77 M_Jup) of…
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