Magnetic field amplification in accretion discs around the first stars: implications for the primordial IMF
Piyush Sharda, Christoph Federrath, Mark R. Krumholz, Dominik R. G., Schleicher

TL;DR
This study uses 3D MHD simulations to show that weak primordial magnetic fields can grow exponentially during first star formation, significantly influencing the primordial initial mass function by affecting disc fragmentation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that even initially weak magnetic fields can become dynamically important in primordial star formation through dynamo processes, impacting the IMF.
Findings
Weak seed fields grow exponentially during collapse
Magnetic fields influence disc fragmentation
Resolution is crucial for capturing dynamo effects
Abstract
Magnetic fields play an important role in the dynamics of present-day molecular clouds. Recent work has shown that magnetic fields are equally important for primordial clouds, which form the first stars in the Universe. While the primordial magnetic field strength on cosmic scales is largely unconstrained, theoretical models strongly suggest that a weak seed field existed in the early Universe. We study how the amplification of such a weak field can influence the evolution of accretion discs around first stars, and thus affect the primordial initial mass function (IMF). We perform a suite of 3D ideal magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) simulations with different initial field strengths and numerical resolutions. We find that, in simulations with sufficient spatial resolution to resolve the Jeans scale during the collapse, even initially weak magnetic fields grow exponentially to become…
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