Magnetic field alignment with dense cores in the transition between cloud and core scales
Sean Yin, Ayush Pandhi, Rachel Friesen, Simon Coud\'e, Laura Fissel, Sarah Sadavoy, James Di Francesco, Doug Johnstone, Fr\'ed\'erick Poidevin, Mehrnoosh Tahani

TL;DR
This study investigates the magnetic field orientations from cloud to core scales in star-forming regions, finding increased disorder at core scales and no consistent alignment, implying a diminished magnetic role in core evolution.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution polarization data analysis showing the transition from ordered to disordered magnetic fields between cloud and core scales.
Findings
Core-scale magnetic fields are more disordered than cloud-scale fields.
Alignment between core and cloud magnetic fields varies greatly across regions.
Results support the idea that magnetic fields may not dominate core evolution.
Abstract
In a magnetically-dominated model of star formation, we expect to see alignments between the magnetic field orientation of star-forming dense cores and the cloud-scale magnetic field. Pandhi et al. (2023) showed instead, however, that the orientation of cores and their angular momentum vectors appear random with respect to the larger-scale magnetic field, implying that magnetic fields may play a diminished role in core formation and evolution. Here, we use higher-resolution dust polarization data from the B-Fields In Star-forming Region Observations (BISTRO) survey on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) to investigate the change in the magnetic field orientation from cloud scales to core scales, and reassess any correlations between core-scale magnetic fields, core orientations and core velocity gradients. We produce a catalog of 79 cores over 14 star-forming regions with averaged…
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