ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Turbulence in a self-gravitating molecular cloud core

94   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Siyao Xu
 تاريخ النشر 2020
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

Externally driven interstellar turbulence plays an important role in shaping the density structure in molecular clouds. Here we study the dynamical role of internally driven turbulence in a self-gravitating molecular cloud core. Depending on the initial conditions and evolutionary stages, we find that a self-gravitating core in the presence of gravity-driven turbulence can undergo constant, decelerated, and accelerated infall, and thus has various radial velocity profiles. In the gravity-dominated central region, a higher level of turbulence results in a lower infall velocity, a higher density, and a lower mass accretion rate. As an important implication of this study, efficient reconnection diffusion of magnetic fields against the gravitational drag naturally occurs due to the gravity-driven turbulence, without invoking externally driven turbulence.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

108 - Blakesley Burkhart 2021
Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence is a crucial component of the current paradigms of star formation, dynamo theory, particle transport, magnetic reconnection and evolution of structure in the interstellar medium (ISM) of galaxies. Despite the impo rtance of turbulence to astrophysical fluids, a full theoretical framework based on solutions to the Navier-Stokes equations remains intractable. Observations provide only limited line-of-sight information on densities, temperatures, velocities and magnetic field strengths and therefore directly measuring turbulence in the ISM is challenging. A statistical approach has been of great utility in allowing comparisons of observations, simulations and analytic predictions. In this review article we address the growing importance of MHD turbulence in many fields of astrophysics and review statistical diagnostics for studying interstellar and interplanetary turbulence. In particular, we will review statistical diagnostics and machine learning algorithms that have been developed for observational data sets in order to obtain information about the turbulence cascade, fluid compressibility (sonic Mach number), and magnetization of fluid (Alfvenic Mach number). These techniques have often been tested on numerical simulations of MHD turbulence, which may include the creation of synthetic observations, and are often formulated on theoretical expectations for compressible magnetized turbulence. We stress the use of multiple techniques, as this can provide a more accurate indication of the turbulence parameters of interest. We conclude by describing several open-source tools for the astrophysical community to use when dealing with turbulence.
We present a new set of analytic models for the expansion of HII regions powered by UV photoionisation from massive stars and compare them to a new suite of radiative magnetohydrodynamic simulations of turbulent, self-gravitating molecular clouds. To perform these simulations we use the Eulerian adaptive mesh magnetohydrodynamics code RAMSES-RT, including radiative transfer of UV photons. Our analytic models successfully predict the global behaviour of the HII region provided the density and velocity structure of the cloud is known. We give estimates for the HII region behaviour based on a power law fit to the density field assuming that the system is virialised. We give a radius at which the ionisation front should stop expanding (stall). If this radius is smaller than the distance to the edge of the cloud, the HII region will be trapped by the cloud. This effect is more severe in collapsing clouds than in virialised clouds, since the density in the former increases dramatically over time, with much larger photon emission rates needed for the HII region to escape a collapsing cloud. We also measure the response of Jeans unstable gas to the HII regions to predict the impact of UV radiation on star formation in the cloud. We find that the mass in unstable gas can be explained by a model in which the clouds are evaporated by UV photons, suggesting that the net feedback on star formation should be negative
We conduct numerical experiments to determine the density probability distribution function (PDF) produced in supersonic, isothermal, self-gravitating turbulence of the sort that is ubiquitous in star-forming molecular clouds. Our experiments cover a wide range of turbulent Mach number and virial parameter, allowing us for the first time to determine how the PDF responds as these parameters vary, and we introduce a new diagnostic, the dimensionless star formation efficiency versus density ($epsilon_{rm ff}(s)$) curve, which provides a sensitive diagnostic of the PDF shape and dynamics. We show that the PDF follows a universal functional form consisting of a log-normal at low density with two distinct power law tails at higher density; the first of these represents the onset of self-gravitation, and the second reflects the onset of rotational support. Once the star formation efficiency reaches a few percent, the PDF becomes statistically steady, with no evidence for secular time-evolution at star formation efficiencies from about five to 20 percent. We show that both the Mach number and the virial parameter influence the characteristic densities at which the log-normal gives way to the first power-law, and the first to the second, and we extend (for the former) and develop (for the latter) simple theoretical models for the relationship between these density thresholds and the global properties of the turbulent medium.
85 - Patrick Hennebelle 2021
The formation of astrophysical structures, such as stars, compact objects but also galaxies, entail an,enhancement of densities by many orders of magnitude which occurs through gravitational collapse. The role played by turbulence during this process is important. Turbulence generates density fluctuations, exerts a support against gravity and possibly delivers angular momentum. How turbulence exactly behave during the collapse and get amplified remains a matter of investigation. Spherical averaging of the fluid equations is carried out, leading to 1D fluid equations that describe the evolution of mean quantities in particular the mean radial velocity as well as the mean radial and transverse turbulent velocities. These equations differ from the ones usually employed in the literature. We then perform a series of 3D numerical simulations of collapsing clouds for a wide range of thermal and turbulent supports with two polytropic equation of state, $P propto rho^Gamma$, with $Gamma=1$ and 1.25. For each 3D simulations we perform a series of 1D simulations using the spherically averaged equations and with the same initial conditions. By performing a detailed comparison between 3D and 1D simulations, we can analyse in great details the observed behaviours. Altogether we find that the two approaches agree remarkably well demonstrating the validity of the inferred equations although when turbulence is initially strong, major deviations from spherical geometry certainly preclude quantitative comparisons. The detailed comparisons lead us to an estimate of the turbulent dissipation parameter that when the turbulence is initially low, is found to be in good agreement with previous estimate of non self-gravitating supersonic turbulence. abridged.
310 - Yingjie Li , Ye Xu , Ji Yang 2015
We present observations of a 4 squared degree area toward the Gemini cloud obtained using J = 1-0 transitions of $^{12}$CO, $^{13}$CO and C$^{18}$O. No C$^{18}$O emission was detected. This region is composed of 36 core candidates of $^{13}$CO. These core candidates have a characteristic diameter of 0.25 pc, excitation temperatures of 7.9 K, line width of 0.54 km s$^{-1}$ and a mean mass of 1.4 M$_{sun}$. They are likely to be starless core candidates, or transient structures, which probably disperse after $sim$10$^6$ yr.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا