The impact of magnetic fields on the IMF in star-forming clouds near a supermassive black hole
S. Hocuk, D. R. G. Schleicher, M. Spaans, and S. Cazaux

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to show that magnetic fields significantly influence the initial mass function and star formation efficiency near supermassive black holes, leading to more stars and a shift towards lower stellar masses.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how magnetic fields affect star formation and the IMF in galactic centers, incorporating effects of magnetic support and X-ray feedback.
Findings
Magnetic fields slow cloud collapse and increase star formation.
IMF peak shifts to sub-solar masses with magnetic support.
X-ray feedback suppresses low-mass star formation and reduces SFE.
Abstract
Star formation in the centers of galaxies is thought to yield massive stars with a possibly top-heavy stellar mass distribution. It is likely that magnetic fields play a crucial role in the distribution of stellar masses inside star-forming molecular clouds. In this context, we explore the effects of magnetic fields, with a typical field strength of 38 microG, such as in RCW 38, and a field strength of 135 microG, similar to NGC 2024 and the infrared dark cloud G28.34+0.06, on the initial mass function (IMF) near (< 10 pc) a 10^7 solar mass black hole. Using these conditions, we perform a series of numerical simulations with the hydrodynamical code FLASH to elucidate the impact of magnetic fields on the IMF and the star-formation efficiency (SFE) emerging from an 800 solar mass cloud. We find that the collapse of a gravitationally unstable molecular cloud is slowed down with increasing…
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