The Hall effect in star formation
Catherine R. Braiding, Mark Wardle

TL;DR
This paper introduces a semi-analytic model demonstrating that Hall diffusion significantly influences star formation dynamics, affecting disc size, accretion rates, and magnetic field orientation, with observable implications for protostellar cores.
Contribution
It presents the first self-similar solutions incorporating both Hall and ambipolar diffusion in collapsing molecular cloud cores, highlighting the Hall effect's profound impact on star formation processes.
Findings
Hall effect alters protostellar disc size by up to an order of magnitude.
The accretion rate can vary by fifty percent due to Hall diffusion.
Hall diffusion can induce rotation in initially non-rotating cores.
Abstract
Magnetic fields play an important role in star formation by regulating the removal of angular momentum from collapsing molecular cloud cores. Hall diffusion is known to be important to the magnetic field behaviour at many of the intermediate densities and field strengths encountered during the gravitational collapse of molecular cloud cores into protostars, and yet its role in the star formation process is not well-studied. We present a semianalytic self-similar model of the collapse of rotating isothermal molecular cloud cores with both Hall and ambipolar diffusion, and similarity solutions that demonstrate the profound influence of the Hall effect on the dynamics of collapse. The solutions show that the size and sign of the Hall parameter can change the size of the protostellar disc by up to an order of magnitude and the protostellar accretion rate by fifty per cent when the ratio…
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