Disk formation during collapse of magnetized protostellar cores
P. Hennebelle, A. Ciardi

TL;DR
This study investigates how the angle between magnetic fields and rotation axes affects disk formation during protostellar collapse, revealing that misalignment facilitates disk formation by reducing magnetic braking.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of non-aligned magnetic field configurations in 3D ideal MHD simulations, highlighting the impact of inclination angle on disk formation.
Findings
Disks form more easily as the angle increases from 0° to 90°.
Magnetic braking efficiency decreases with larger inclination angles.
Aligned configurations require higher mass-to-flux ratios for disk formation.
Abstract
In the context of star and planet formation, understanding the formation of disks is of fundamental importance. Previous studies found that the magnetic field has a very strong impact on the collapse of a prestellar cloud, particularly in possibly suppressing the formation of a disk even for relatively modest values of the magnetic intensity. Since observations infer that cores have a substantial level of magnetization, this raises the question of how disks form. However, most studies have been restricted to the case in which the initial angle, , between the magnetic field and the rotation axis equals 0. We explore and analyse the influence of non aligned configurations on disk formation. We perform 3D ideal MHD, AMR numerical simulations for various values of , the ratio of the mass-to-flux to the critical mass-to-flux, and various values of . We find that…
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