78 research outputs found

    Dynamical Collapse of Nonrotating Magnetic Molecular Cloud Cores: Evolution Through Point-Mass Formation

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    We present a numerical simulation of the dynamical collapse of a nonrotating magnetic molecular cloud core and follow the core's evolution through the formation of a central point mass and its subsequent growth to a 1 solar-mass protostar. The epoch of point-mass formation (PMF) is investigated by a self- consistent extension of previously presented models of core formation and contraction in axisymmetric, self-gravitating, isothermal, magnetically supported interstellar molecular clouds. Prior to PMF, the core is dynamically contracting and is not well approximated by a quasistatic equilibrium model. Ambipolar diffusion, which plays a key role in the early evolution of the core, is unimportant during the dynamical pre-PMF collapse phase. However, the appearance of a central mass, through its effect on the gravitational field in the inner core regions, leads to a "revitalization" of ambipolar diffusion in the weakly ionized gas surrounding the central protostar. This process is so efficient that it leads to a decoupling of the field from the matter and results in an outward propagating hydromagnetic C-type shock. The existence of an ambipolar diffusion-mediated shock was predicted by Li & McKee (1996), and we find that the basic shock structure given by their analytical model is well reproduced by our more accurate numerical results. Our calculation also demonstrates that ambipolar diffusion, rather than Ohmic diffusivity operating in the innermost core region, is the main field decoupling mechanism responsible for driving the shock after PMF.Comment: 59 pages, 10 figures, AASTeX4.0 accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa

    Hydrogen atom transfer reactions of N +

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