Twisted magnetic field in star formation processes of L1521 F revealed by submillimeter dual band polarimetry using James Clerk Maxwell Telescope
Sakiko Fukaya, Hiroko Shinnaga, Ray S. Furuya, Kohji Tomisaka,, Masahiro N. Machida, Naoto Harada

TL;DR
This study reveals a twisted magnetic field structure in the star-forming core L1521 F through multi-wavelength submillimeter polarimetry, showing orthogonal magnetic field orientations and estimating magnetic field strengths, contributing to understanding magnetic influence in star formation.
Contribution
First combined observational and MHD simulation analysis of magnetic field morphology and strength in L1521 F, highlighting a complex twisted magnetic field structure in a star-forming core.
Findings
Magnetic field orientation differs between core center and periphery.
Magnetic field strengths estimated at ~70 μG and 200 μG.
L1521 F is magnetically supercritical, with gravity dominating over magnetic support.
Abstract
Understanding the initial conditions of star formation requires both observational studies and theoretical works taking into account the magnetic field, which plays an important role in star formation processes. Herein, we study the young nearby dense cloud core L1521 F ((H) cm) in the Taurus Molecular Cloud. This dense core hosts a 0.2 protostar, categorized as a Very Low Luminosity Objects with complex velocity structures, particularly in the vicinity of the protostar. To trace the magnetic field within the dense core, we conducted high sensitivity submillimeter polarimetry of the dust continuum at = 850 m and 450 m using the POL-2 polarimeter situated in front of the SCUBA-2 submillimeter bolometer camera on James Clerk Maxwell Tetescope. This was compared with millimeter polarimetry taken at = 3.3 mm with ALMA. The…
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