Anchoring Magnetic Field in Turbulent Molecular Clouds
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One of the key problems in star formation research is to determine the role of magnetic fields. Starting from the atomic inter-cloud medium (ICM) which has density nH ~ 1 per cubic cm, gas must accumulate from a volume several hundred pc across in order to form a typical molecular cloud. Star formation usually occurs in cloud cores, which have linear sizes below 1 pc and densities nH2 > 10^5 per cubic cm. With current technologies, it is hard to probe magnetic fields at scales lying between the accumulation length and the size of cloud cores, a range corresponds to many levels of turbulent eddy cascade, and many orders of magnitude of density amplification. For field directions detected from the two extremes, however, we show here that a significant correlation is found. Comparing this result with molecular cloud simulations, only the sub-Alfvenic cases result in field orientations consistent with our observations.
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Projection Is All You Need: Interpreting Polarization Measurements in the Orion Clouds with Sub-Alfv\'enic MHD Simulations
Sub-Alfvénic MHD simulations with projection effects reproduce the range of observed polarization (μ, σ) values in Orion ISF, showing these statistics alone cannot constrain the 3D Alfvén Mach number.
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