Non-ideal magnetohydrodynamics of self-gravitating filaments
Nicol Guti\'errez-Vera, Tommaso Grassi, Stefano Bovino, Alessandro, Lupi, Daniele Galli, Dominik R.G. Schleicher

TL;DR
This study explores how non-ideal magnetohydrodynamic effects, combined with chemistry, influence the evolution, width, and accretion rate of self-gravitating star-forming filaments, highlighting the importance of magnetic field properties and cosmic rays.
Contribution
It introduces a 1D non-ideal MHD model with chemistry to analyze filament evolution, emphasizing the impact of magnetic and cosmic ray effects on observable properties.
Findings
Magnetic field strength and orientation significantly affect filament width and accretion.
Higher cosmic ray ionization rates lead to behavior closer to ideal MHD.
Including non-ideal effects reduces variability in filament properties.
Abstract
Filaments have been studied in detail through observations and simulations. A range of numerical works have separately investigated how chemistry and diffusion effects, as well as magnetic fields and their structure impact the gas dynamics of the filament. However, non-ideal effects have hardly been explored thus far. We investigate how non-ideal magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) effects, combined with a simplified chemical model affect the evolution and accretion of a star-forming filament. We modeled an accreting self-gravitating turbulent filament using lemongrab, a one-dimensional (1D) non-ideal MHD code that includes chemistry. We explore the influence of non-ideal MHD, the orientation and strength of the magnetic field, and the cosmic ray ionization rate, on the evolution of the filament, with particular focus on the width and accretion rate. We find that the filament width and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Advanced Combustion Engine Technologies · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
