1201.5640 (Jonathan Braithwaite)
Jonathan Braithwaite
Strong magnetic fields play a crucial role in the removal of angular momentum
from collapsing clouds and protostellar discs and are necessary for the
formation of disc winds as well as jets from the inner disc and indeed, strong
large-scale poloidal magnetic fields are observed in protostellar discs at all
radii down to $\sim 10 R_\odot$. Nevertheless, by the time the star is visible
virtually all of the original magnetic flux has vanished. I explore mechanisms
for removing this flux during the formation of the protostar once it is
magnetically disconnected from the parent cloud, looking at both radiative and
convective protostars. This includes a numerical investigation of buoyant
magnetic field removal from convective stars. It is found that if the star goes
through a fully convective phase all remaining flux can easily be removed from
the protostar, essentially on an Alfv\'en timescale. If on the other hand the
protostar has no fully convective phase then some flux can be retained, the
quantity depending on the net magnetic helicity, which is probably quite small.
Only some fraction of this flux is visible at the stellar surface. I also look
at how the same mechanisms could prevent flux from accreting onto the star at
all, meaning that mass would only accrete as fast as it is able to slip past
the flux.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1201.5640
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