Magnetic Flux Expulsion in Star Formation
Bo Zhao (1), Zhi-Yun Li (1), Fumitaka Nakamura (2), Ruben Krasnopolsky, (3), Hsien Shang (3) ((1) University of Virginia, (2) NAOJ, (3) Academia, Sinica)

TL;DR
This study uses 3D MHD simulations to investigate how decoupled magnetic flux influences star formation, revealing flux expulsion mechanisms, asymmetrical accretion flows, and impacts on disk formation.
Contribution
First 3D MHD simulation exploring magnetic flux decoupling effects on protostellar collapse and accretion dynamics.
Findings
Decoupled flux accumulates and is expelled anisotropically.
Magnetic flux expulsion creates a magnetic wall hindering disk formation.
Flux dynamics induce asymmetries and potential stellar kicks.
Abstract
Stars form in dense cores of magnetized molecular clouds. If the magnetic flux threading the cores is dragged into the stars, the stellar field would be orders of magnitude stronger than observed. This well-known "magnetic flux problem" demands that most of the core magnetic flux be decoupled from the matter that enters the star. We carry out the first exploration of what happens to the decoupled magnetic flux in 3D, using an MHD version of the ENZO adaptive mesh refinement code. The field-matter decoupling is achieved through a sink particle treatment, which is needed to follow the protostellar accretion phase of star formation. We find that the accumulation of the decoupled flux near the accreting protostar leads to a magnetic pressure buildup. The high pressure is released anisotropically, along the path of least resistance. It drives a low-density expanding region in which the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
