Protostellar birth with ambipolar and ohmic diffusion
Neil Vaytet, Beno\^it Commer\c{c}on, Jacques Masson, Matthias, Gonz\'alez, Gilles Chabrier

TL;DR
This study uses 3D simulations to show that magnetic diffusion processes like ambipolar and ohmic diffusion are crucial for star formation, as they regulate magnetic field amplification, preserve angular momentum, and enable protoplanetary disk formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates the significant impact of non-ideal MHD effects on angular momentum retention and disk formation during protostellar collapse, advancing understanding beyond ideal MHD models.
Findings
Magnetic diffusion prevents magnetic field amplification in the first core.
Angular momentum is preserved with diffusion, allowing disk formation.
Magnetic diffusion is essential for star and planet formation processes.
Abstract
The transport of angular momentum is capital during the formation of low-mass stars; too little removal and rotation ensures stellar densities are never reached, too much and the absence of rotation means no protoplanetary disks can form. Magnetic diffusion is seen as a pathway to resolving this long-standing problem. We investigate the impact of including resistive MHD in simulations of the gravitational collapse of a 1 solar mass gas sphere, from molecular cloud densities to the formation of the protostellar seed; the second Larson core. We used the AMR code RAMSES to perform two 3D simulations of collapsing magnetised gas spheres, including self-gravity, radiative transfer, and a non-ideal gas equation of state to describe H2 dissociation which leads to the second collapse. The first run was carried out under the ideal MHD approximation, while ambipolar and ohmic diffusion was…
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