Magnetic fields during the early stages of massive star formation - I. Accretion and disk evolution
D. Seifried, R. Banerjee, R. S. Klessen, D. Duffin, R. E. Pudritz

TL;DR
This study uses magnetohydrodynamic simulations to explore how magnetic fields influence accretion and disk formation in massive star formation, revealing conditions that favor early Keplerian disk development and their stability.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of magnetic effects on early disk formation and accretion in massive star formation across a wide parameter space.
Findings
Keplerian disks form only when magnetic flux is weak (rac{1}{10})
Magnetic braking rapidly removes angular momentum in strong magnetic fields
Accretion rates are consistently around a few 10^-4 M_sun/yr across simulations
Abstract
We present simulations of collapsing 100 M_\sun mass cores in the context of massive star formation. The effect of variable initial rotational and magnetic energies on the formation of massive stars is studied in detail. We focus on accretion rates and on the question under which conditions massive Keplerian disks can form in the very early evolutionary stage of massive protostars. For this purpose, we perform 12 simulations with different initial conditions extending over a wide range in parameter space. The equations of magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) are solved under the assumption of ideal MHD. We find that the formation of Keplerian disks in the very early stages is suppressed for a mass-to-flux ratio normalised to the critical value \mu below 10, in agreement with a series of low-mass star formation simulations. This is caused by very efficient magnetic braking resulting in a nearly…
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