Protostellar Accretion Flows Destabilized by Magnetic Flux Redistribution
Ruben Krasnopolsky (1), Zhi-Yun Li (2), Hsien Shang (1), Bo Zhao (2), ((1) Academia Sinica, Taipei, (2) University of Virginia, Charlottesville)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that magnetic flux redistribution in protostellar accretion flows causes instability, leading to disordered, filamentary inflows that influence magnetic braking and disk formation.
Contribution
The study reveals that magnetic interchange instability destabilizes axisymmetric accretion flows in three dimensions, affecting magnetic flux transport and disk formation during star formation.
Findings
Magnetic interchange instability develops during the transition to protostellar accretion.
Magnetic flux is transported outward mainly through advection in low-density regions.
No rotationally supported disks were observed in the simulations despite flux transport effects.
Abstract
Magnetic flux redistribution lies at the heart of the problem of star formation in dense cores of molecular clouds that are magnetized to a realistic level. If all of the magnetic flux of a typical core were to be dragged into the central star, the stellar field strength would be orders of magnitude higher than the observed values. This well-known "magnetic flux problem" can in principle be resolved through non-ideal MHD effects. Two dimensional (axisymmetric) calculations have shown that ambipolar diffusion, in particular, can transport magnetic flux outward relative to matter, allowing material to enter the central object without dragging the field lines along. We show through simulations that such axisymmetric protostellar accretion flows are unstable in three dimensions to magnetic interchange instability in the azimuthal direction. The instability is driven by the magnetic flux…
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.
