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Do we need non-ideal magnetohydrodynamic to model protostellar discs?

James Wurster

2020Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT We investigate and discuss protostellar discs in terms of where the various non-ideal magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) processes are important. We find that the traditional picture of a magnetized disc (where Ohmic resistivity is dominant near the mid-plane, surrounded by a region dominated by the Hall effect, with the remainder of the disc dominated by ambipolar diffusion) is a great oversimplification. In simple parametrized discs, we find that the Hall effect is typically the dominant term throughout the majority of the disc. More importantly, we find that in much of our parametrized discs, at least two non-ideal processes have coefficients within a factor of 10 of one another, indicating that both are important and that naming a dominant term underplays the importance of the other terms. Discs that were self-consistently formed in our previous studies are also dominated by the Hall effect, and the ratio of ambipolar diffusion and Hall coefficients is typically less than 10, suggesting that both terms are equally important and listing a dominant term is misleading. These conclusions become more robust once the magnetic field geometry is taken into account. In agreement with the literature we review, we conclude that non-ideal MHD processes are important for the formation and evolution of protostellar discs. Ignoring any of the non-ideal processes, especially ambipolar diffusion and the Hall effect, yields an incorrect description of disc evolution.

Topics & Concepts

Ambipolar diffusionPhysicsMagnetohydrodynamicsAstrophysicsIdeal (ethics)Magnetohydrodynamic driveMagnetic fieldDiffusionTerm (time)Hall effectAstronomyElectronThermodynamicsQuantum mechanicsPhilosophyEpistemologyAstrophysics and Star Formation StudiesStellar, planetary, and galactic studiesAdvanced Chemical Physics Studies
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