Magnetization of cloud cores and envelopes and other observational consequences of reconnection diffusion
A. Lazarian, A. Esquivel, and R. Crutcher

TL;DR
This paper proposes that magnetic reconnection diffusion in turbulent molecular clouds explains observed magnetic field properties and flux distributions in star-forming regions, challenging traditional ambipolar diffusion models.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of reconnection diffusion as an efficient magnetic flux removal process, aligning theoretical predictions with observational data.
Findings
Reconnection diffusion explains weaker magnetic fields in cloud envelopes.
The process results in faster magnetic flux removal from envelopes than cores.
Semi-analytical models support the observational consistency of reconnection diffusion.
Abstract
Recent observational results for magnetic fields in molecular clouds reviewed by Crutcher (2012) seem to be inconsistent with the predictions of the ambipolar diffusion theory of star formation. These include the measured decrease in mass to flux ratio between envelopes and cores, the failure to detect any self-gravitating magnetically subcritical clouds, the determination of the flat PDF of the total magnetic field strengths implying that there are many clouds with very weak magnetic fields, and the observed scaling that implies gravitational contraction with weak magnetic fields. We consider the problem of magnetic field evolution in turbulent molecular clouds and discuss the process of magnetic field diffusion mediated by magnetic reconnection. For this process that we termed "reconnection diffusion" we provide a simple physical model and explain that this…
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