Synthetic populations of protoplanetary disks. Impact of magnetic fields and radiative transfer
U. Lebreuilly, P. Hennebelle, T. Colman, A. Maury, N.-D. Tung, L., Testi, R. Klessen, S. Molinari, B. Commer\c{c}on, M. Gonz\'alez, E. Pacetti,, A. Somigliana, and G. Rosotti

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to explore how magnetic fields and radiative transfer influence the formation and properties of protostellar disks, providing synthetic populations to interpret observations.
Contribution
It introduces detailed MHD and radiative transfer simulations of disk formation in massive clumps, highlighting the effects of magnetic fields and feedback on disk properties.
Findings
Weaker magnetic fields lead to larger, more massive disks.
Ambipolar diffusion significantly affects disk magnetic properties.
Models with a mass-to-flux ratio of 10 best match observed disk sizes.
Abstract
Protostellar disks are the product of angular momentum conservation during the protostellar collapse. Understanding their formation is crucial because they are the birthplace of planets and because their formation is tightly related to star formation. Unfortunately, the initial properties of Class 0 disks and their evolution are still poorly constrained observationally and theoretically. We aim to better understand the mechanisms that set the statistics of disk properties as well as to study their formation in massive protostellar clumps. We also want to provide the community with synthetic disk populations to better interpret young disk observations. We use the ramses code to model star and disk formation in massive protostellar clumps with MHD including the effect of ambipolar diffusion and RT including the stellar radiative feedback. Those simulations, resolved up to the astronomical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies
