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Cooling, Gravity and Geometry: Flow-driven Massive Core Formation

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 نشر من قبل Fabian Heitsch
 تاريخ النشر 2007
  مجال البحث فيزياء
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 تأليف Fabian Heitsch




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We study numerically the formation of molecular clouds in large-scale colliding flows including self-gravity. The models emphasize the competition between the effects of gravity on global and local scales in an isolated cloud. Global gravity builds up large-scale filaments, while local gravity -- triggered by a combination of strong thermal and dynamical instabilities -- causes cores to form. The dynamical instabilities give rise to a local focusing of the colliding flows, facilitating the rapid formation of massive protostellar cores of a few 100 M$_odot$. The forming clouds do not reach an equilibrium state, though the motions within the clouds appear comparable to ``virial. The self-similar core mass distributions derived from models with and without self-gravity indicate that the core mass distribution is set very early on during the cloud formation process, predominantly by a combination of thermal and dynamical instabilities rather than by self-gravity.



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