Ionization degree and magnetic diffusivity in star-forming clouds with different metallicities
Daisuke Nakauchi, Kazuyuki Omukai, Hajime Susa

TL;DR
This study investigates how metallicity influences ionization and magnetic diffusivity in star-forming clouds, revealing that ionization degrees are significantly higher than previous estimates, affecting magnetic field coupling during star formation.
Contribution
The paper introduces an updated chemical network accounting for grain-surface processes and thermal ionization, providing more accurate ionization degrees across various metallicities in star-forming clouds.
Findings
Ionization degree is up to eight orders higher than previous models.
Magnetic fields recover strong coupling at lower densities (~10^15 cm^-3).
Developed a reduced chemical network for efficient modeling.
Abstract
Magnetic fields play such essential roles in star formation as transporting angular momentum and driving outflows from a star-forming cloud, thereby controlling the formation efficiency of a circumstellar disc and also multiple stellar systems. The coupling of magnetic fields to the gas depends on its ionization degree. We calculate the temperature evolution and ionization degree of a cloud for various metallicities of Z/Zsun = 1e-6, 1e-5, 1e-4, 1e-3, 1e-2, 1e-1, and 1. We update the chemical network by reversing all the gas-phase processes and by considering grain-surface chemistry, including grain evaporation, thermal ionization of alkali metals, and thermionic emission from grains. The ionization degree at nH ~ 1e15-1e19 /cm^3 becomes up to eight orders of magnitude higher than that obtained in the previous model, owing to the thermionic emission and thermal ionization of K and Na,…
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