A new Jeans resolution criterion for (M)HD simulations of self-gravitating gas: Application to magnetic field amplification by gravity-driven turbulence
Christoph Federrath, Sharanya Sur, Dominik R. G. Schleicher, Robi, Banerjee, Ralf S. Klessen

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new resolution criterion for (M)HD simulations of self-gravitating gas, demonstrating that resolving the Jeans scale with 30 cells is essential to accurately capture turbulence and magnetic field amplification during gravitational collapse.
Contribution
The authors propose a minimum resolution of 30 cells per Jeans length for (M)HD simulations to properly resolve gravity-driven turbulence and dynamo amplification of magnetic fields.
Findings
Gravity-driven turbulence efficiently converts gravitational energy into turbulent motions.
Magnetic fields are exponentially amplified via small-scale dynamo when adequately resolved.
A resolution of 30 cells per Jeans length is necessary to capture key physical processes.
Abstract
Cosmic structure formation is characterized by the complex interplay between gravity, turbulence, and magnetic fields. The processes by which gravitational energy is converted into turbulent and magnetic energies, however, remain poorly understood. Here, we show with high-resolution, adaptive-mesh simulations that MHD turbulence is efficiently driven by extracting energy from the gravitational potential during the collapse of a dense gas cloud. Compressible motions generated during the contraction are converted into solenoidal, turbulent motions, leading to a natural energy ratio of E_sol/E_tot of approximately 2/3. We find that the energy injection scale of gravity-driven turbulence is close to the local Jeans scale. If small seeds of the magnetic field are present, they are amplified exponentially fast via the small-scale dynamo process. The magnetic field grows most efficiently on…
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