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Published August 3, 2012 | Published
Report Open

A Theory of the Role of Magnetic Activity During Star Formation

Abstract

Under the assumption that magnetic activity is due to the action of a magnetic field in a rotating star with a convective zone, it is possible to draw the following picture of a sequence of events in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. The H-R diagram is divided into two regions by an almost vertical line. Stars of later type have a hydrogen convective zone of great extension (region C); stars of earlier type have no hydrogen convective zone or a convective zone of small extension (region D). Stars in region C show stellar activity of electrodynamic origin like solar activity; stars in region D show little or no stellar activity. When matter is ejected by a star, the magnetic field compels the matter to rotate with the star even at very large distances where it carries away large angular momentum per unit mass. Stars which reach the main sequence in region C may lose a large amount of angular momentum, while stars reaching the main sequence in region D lose only a little.

Additional Information

Supported in part by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (ARDC) under Contract No. AF 49 (638)-21. A special pre-print distribution is hereby made; a fuller version will appear elsewhere at a later date.

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Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
January 13, 2024