Dust coagulation feedback on magnetohydrodynamic resistivities in protostellar collapse
V. Guillet, P. Hennebelle, G. Pineau des For\^ets, A. Marcowith, B., Commer\c{c}on, P. Marchand

TL;DR
This study investigates how dust grain coagulation influences magnetic resistivities during protostellar collapse, revealing that systematic velocities can significantly alter resistivity evolution and magnetic coupling in star-forming regions.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed 1-D model incorporating grain coagulation and systematic velocities, showing their effects on MHD resistivities during core collapse.
Findings
Coagulation by turbulence alone does not significantly affect resistivities.
Systematic velocities enhance coagulation, reducing small grains and increasing resistivities.
Resistivities are higher by 1-2 orders of magnitude with coagulation at certain densities.
Abstract
The degree of coupling between the gas and the magnetic field during the collapse of a core and the subsequent formation of a disk depends on the assumed dust size distribution. We study the impact of grain-grain coagulation on the evolution of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) resistivities during the collapse of a prestellar core. We use a 1-D model to follow the evolution of the dust size distribution, out-of-equilibrium ionization state and gas chemistry during the collapse of a prestellar core. To compute the grain-grain collisional rate, we consider models for both random and systematic, size-dependent, velocities. We include grain growth through grain-grain coagulation and ice accretion, but ignore grain fragmentation. Starting with a MRN (Mathis et al. 1977) size distribution, we find that coagulation in grain-grain collisions generated by hydrodynamical turbulence is not efficient at…
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