1 / 27

A resolution of the magnetic braking catastrophe during the second collapse

A resolution of the magnetic braking catastrophe during the second collapse. Wolf B. Dapp & Shantanu Basu. cc2yso UWO, May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp. Protostellar disks. www.hubblesite.org. Magnetic flux and angular momentum problem.

Download Presentation

A resolution of the magnetic braking catastrophe during the second collapse

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A resolution of the magnetic braking catastrophe during the second collapse Wolf B. Dapp & Shantanu Basu cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  2. Protostellar disks www.hubblesite.org

  3. Magnetic flux and angular momentum problem • the resolution of those two problems are interlinked (preceding talks by Galli, Li) • cloud cores have ideal MHD cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  4. Magnetic braking • coupling of disk’s magnetic field with external field • torsional Alfvén waves transfer angular momentum from disk to low-density external medium

  5. Ambipolar diffusion • ions gyrate around magnetic field lines • neutrals effectively ‘feel’ the magnetic field through collisions • they drift only slowly past the ions • dominant flux loss mechanism in the regime n < ~1010 cm-3 (c) 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison Wesley

  6. Ohmic dissipation • if charged particles are not well-coupled to the magnetic field, collisions can knock them off, and flux is dissipated • dominant flux loss mechanism between ~1012 < n < 1015 cm-3(Nakano et al. 2002, Kunz & Mouschovias 2010)

  7. Introduction • Method and Initial State • Results • Future work • Summary Outline cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  8. our approach common approach AU-sized sink cell resolution down to stellar sizes • AU-sized sink cells, only first core resolved • no disk formation found • a disk forms under the right conditions cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  9. Method • axisymmetric, rotating, thin disk • logarithmic, adaptive grid, N = 1024, Drmin = 0.02 , resolving the 2nd core • ambipolar diffusion, ohmic dissipation, magnetic braking, and force-free external B • barotropic pressure-density relation • disk is hydrostatic in z-direction, incl point mass/disk gravity, magnetic pinching, thermal and external pressure cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  10. Magnetic braking and ohmic dissipation from steady-state Alfvén wave propagation (Basu & Mouschovias 1994) resistivity, Machida et al. (2007), Nakano et al. (2002) ionization fraction cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  11. Barotropic pressure-density relation Masunaga & Inutsuka (2000) secondcore Ionization of HI @13.6 eV Dissociation of H2 @4.5 eV geff = 1.1 second collapse g= 7/5 collapsing dense core “first core” cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  12. central number density column density rotation rate external number density vertical magnetic field mass-to-flux ratio Temperature nc = 4.4 x 106 cm-3 Sc = 0.23 g cm-2 Wedge = 0.3 km s-1 pc-1 = 10-14 s-1 next = 103 cm-3 Bz = 200 mG m0 = 2 T = 10 K Initial state cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  13. Introduction • Method and Initial State • Results • Future work • Summary Outline cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  14. Results: Density profile second core Dapp & Basu (2010) ohmic dissipation first core flux-freezing added centrifg support under flux freezing magnetic wall prestellar infall profile, r -1 expansion wave, r -1/2 cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  15. Results: Magnetic Field Dapp & Basu (2010) } 3 orders of magnitude difference magnetic wall cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  16. Results: Mass-to-flux ratio Dapp & Basu (2010) cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  17. Results: Angular velocity Dapp & Basu (2010) expansion wave, r -2 magnetic braking catastrophe cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  18. Disk formation! • introduce sink cell (a few ) after 2nd core forms Dapp & Basu (2010) centrifugal balance • centrifugal balance is achieved cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  19. Disk formation! • infall velocity plummets Dapp & Basu (2010) cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  20. Disk formation! • disk fragments into ring Dapp & Basu (2010) classical Toomre instability cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  21. very fast runs, allows for large parameter searches • Add non-axisymmetry or effective viscosity to stabilize disk / long-term disk evolution Future work cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  22. we resolve the 2nd core • despite magnetic braking, a disk does form at a very early age, very close to the 2nd core • we can differentiate between prestellar and centrifugal disks • we resolve and identify features like • expansion waves in S,W • magnetic wall(s) • Ohmic dissipation • removes flux efficiently within 1st core, • effectively shuts off magnetic braking, • increases m-t-f ratio by ~103 Summary cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  23. The End cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  24. Thin-disk test • thin-disk model is justified within the 1st core, and in the prestellar profile outside • it’s not applicable within the 2nd core, as expected Z = r cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  25. Initial profile • collapse profile with and • angular velocity goes as column density Dapp & Basu (2010) cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  26. Expansion wave effects • gravitational field just outside the central stellar core instead of as further out • free-fall profile outside of star, • infall velocity • steady-state mass accretion • angular velocity now • angular momentum cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

  27. Mass-to-flux-ratio in the ISM Basu (2005) • observations consistent with m = 1 • assembled from ionized subcritical HI gas • problems with higher m: • accumulation length~1 kpc for m = 1 • accumulation speed10 km/s ↔ 10 pc/Myr • collapse as soon as m > 1 • large scale fields ordered • Emag ~ Egrav Alves et al. (2008) cc2yso UWO,May 17, 2010 – Wolf Dapp

More Related