ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We investigate the turbulence driving mode of ionizing radiation from massive stars on the surrounding interstellar medium (ISM). We run hydrodynamical simulations of a turbulent cloud impinged by a plane-parallel ionization front. We find that the ionizing radiation forms pillars of neutral gas reminiscent of those seen in observations. We quantify the driving mode of the turbulence in the neutral gas by calculating the driving parameter $b$, which is characterised by the relation $sigma_s^2 = ln({1+b^2mathcal{M}^2})$ between the variance of the logarithmic density contrast $sigma_s^2$ (where $s = ln({rho/rho_0})$ with the gas density $rho$ and its average $rho_0$), and the turbulent Mach number $mathcal{M}$. Previous works have shown that $bsim1/3$ indicates solenoidal (divergence-free) driving and $bsim1$ indicates compressive (curl-free) driving, with $bsim1$ producing up to ten times higher star formation rates than $bsim1/3$. The time variation of $b$ in our study allows us to infer that ionizing radiation is inherently a compressive turbulence driving source, with a time-averaged $bsim 0.76 pm 0.08$. We also investigate the value of $b$ of the pillars, where star formation is expected to occur, and find that the pillars are characterised by a natural mixture of both solenoidal and compressive turbulent modes ($bsim0.4$) when they form, and later evolve into a more compressive turbulent state with $bsim0.5$--$0.6$. A virial parameter analysis of the pillar regions supports this conclusion. This indicates that ionizing radiation from massive stars may be able to trigger star formation by producing predominately compressive turbulent gas in the pillars.
We investigate the scale dependence of fluctuations inside a realistic model of an evolving turbulent HII region and to what extent these may be studied observationally. We find that the multiple scales of energy injection from champagne flows and th
Observations of the four $^{2}Pi_{3/2},~J = 3/2$~ground state transitions of the hydroxyl radical (OH) have emerged as an informative tracer of molecular gas in the Galactic ISM. We discuss an OH spectral feature known as the `flip, in which the sate
The tight correlation between turbulence and luminosity in Giant HII Regions is not well understood. While the luminosity is due to the UV radiation from the massive stars in the ionizing clusters, it is not clear what powers the turbulence. Observat
Context. The derived physical parameters for young HII regions are normally determined assuming the emission region to be optically thin. However, this assumption is unlikely to hold for young HII regions such as hyper-compact HII(HCHII) and ultra-co
High-mass stars form in much richer environments than those associated with isolated low-mass stars, and once they reach a certain mass, produce ionised (HII) regions. The formation of these pockets of ionised gas are unique to the formation of high-