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Accretion discs, low-mass protostars and planets: probing the impact of magnetic fields on stellar formation

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arxiv 0804.0683 v1 pith:E47MPPKK submitted 2008-04-04 astro-ph

Accretion discs, low-mass protostars and planets: probing the impact of magnetic fields on stellar formation

classification astro-ph
keywords stellarfieldsformationmagneticprotostarsaccretiondiscsmajor
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Whereas the understanding of most phases of stellar evolution made considerable progress throughout the whole of the twentieth century, stellar formation remained rather enigmatic and poorly constrained by observations until about three decades ago, when major discoveries (e.g., that protostars are often associated with highly collimated jets) revolutionized the field. At this time, it became increasingly clearer that magnetic fields were playing a major role at all stages of stellar formation. We describe herein a quick overview of the main breakthroughs that observations and theoretical modelling yielded for our understanding of how stars (and their planetary systems) are formed and on how much these new worlds are shaped by the presence of magnetic fields, either those pervading the interstellar medium and threading molecular clouds or those produced through dynamo processes in the convective envelopes of protostars or in the accretion discs from which they feed.

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