1,551 research outputs found
Formation of Cold Filamentary Structure from Wind Blown Superbubbles
The expansion and collision of two wind-blown superbubbles is investigated
numerically. Our models go beyond previous simulations of molecular cloud
formation from converging gas flows by exploring this process with realistic
flow parameters, sizes and timescales. The superbubbles are blown by
time-dependent winds and supernova explosions, calculated from population
synthesis models. They expand into a uniform or turbulent diffuse medium. We
find that dense, cold gas clumps and filaments form naturally in the compressed
collision zone of the two superbubbles. Their shapes resemble the elongated,
irregular structure of observed cold, molecular gas filaments and clumps. At
the end of the simulations, between 65 and 80 percent of the total gas mass in
our simulation box is contained in these structures. The clumps are found in a
variety of physical states, ranging from pressure equilibrium with the
surrounding medium to highly under-pressured clumps with large irregular
internal motions and structures which are rotationally supported.Comment: Submitted to Ap
Competitive Accretion in Sheet Geometry and the Stellar IMF
We report a set of numerical experiments aimed at addressing the
applicability of competitive accretion to explain the high-mass end of the
stellar initial mass function in a sheet geometry with shallow gravitational
potential, in contrast to most previous simulations which have assumed
formation in a cluster gravitational potential. Our flat cloud geometry is
motivated by models of molecular cloud formation due to large-scale flows in
the interstellar medium. The experiments consisted of SPH simulations of gas
accretion onto sink particles formed rapidly from Jeans-unstable dense clumps
placed randomly in the finite sheet. These simplifications allow us to study
accretion with a minimum of free parameters, and to develop better statistics
on the resulting mass spectra. We considered both clumps of equal mass and
gaussian distributions of masses, and either uniform or spatially-varying gas
densities. In all cases, the sink mass function develops a power law tail at
high masses, with . The accretion rates of
individual sinks follow at high masses; this results in a
continual flattening of the slope of the mass function towards an asymptotic
form (where the Salpeter slope is ). The
asymptotic limit is most rapidly reached when starting from a relatively broad
distribution of initial sink masses. In general the resulting upper mass slope
is correlated with the maximum sink mass; higher sink masses are found in
simulations with flatter upper mass slopes. Although these simulations are of a
highly idealized situation, the results suggest that competitive accretion may
be relevant in a wider variety of environments than previously considered, and
in particular that the upper mass distribution may generally evolve towards a
limiting value of .Comment: 20 pages, 12 figure
Accretion and Diffusion Timescales in Sheets and Filaments
A comparison of accretion and (turbulent) magnetic diffusion timescales for
sheets and filaments demonstrates that dense star-forming clouds generally will
-- under realistic conditions -- become supercritical due to mass accretion on
timescales at least an order of magnitude shorter than ambipolar and/or
turbulent diffusion timescales. Thus, ambipolar or turbulent diffusion -- while
present -- is unlikely to control the formation of cores and stars.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted by MNRA
Two-Fluid MHD Simulations of Converging Hi Flows in the Interstellar Medium. II: Are Molecular Clouds Generated Directly from Warm Neutral Medium?
Formation of interstellar clouds as a consequence of thermal instability is
studied using two-dimensional two-fluid magnetohydrodynamic simulations. We
consider the situation of converging, supersonic flows of warm neutral medium
in the interstellar medium that generate a shocked slab of thermally unstable
gas in which clouds form. We found, as speculated in paper I, that in the
shocked slab magnetic pressure dominates thermal pressure and the thermal
instability grows in the isochorically cooling, thermally unstable slab that
leads formation of HI clouds whose number density is typically n < 100 cm^-3,
even if the angle between magnetic field and converging flows is small. We also
found that even if there is a large dispersion of magnetic field, evolution of
the shocked slab is essentially determined by the angle between the mean
magnetic field and converging flows. Thus, the direct formation of molecular
clouds by piling up warm neutral medium does not seem a typical molecular cloud
formation process, unless the direction of supersonic converging flows is
biased to the orientation of mean magnetic field by some mechanism. However,
when the angle is small, the HI shell generated as a result of converging flows
is massive and possibly evolves into molecular clouds, provided gas in the
massive HI shell is piled up again along the magnetic field line. We expect
that another subsequent shock wave can pile up again the gas of the massive
shell and produce a larger cloud. We thus emphasize the importance of multiple
episodes of converging flows, as a typical formation process of molecular
clouds.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted by Ap
The metal-rich globular clusters of the Milky Way
We present new (V,V-I)-photometry of the metal-rich globular clusters NGC
5927, 6316, 6342, 6441 and 6760. The clusters show differential reddening up to
dE(V-I)=0.32 mag, for which the CMDs are corrected via extinction maps. There
are hints of a variation in the extinction law. Two different ways to determine
the parameters metallicity, reddening and distance lead to consistent results.
The metallicities of the clusters range between -0.7 <= [M/H] <= 0.0 dex and
the absolute reddening between 0.43 <= E(V-I) <= 0.76 mag. Taking the
differential reddening into account leads to slightly increased distances. From
the resulting parameters we conclude that the usual halo-disk-distinction in
the system of globular clusters seems questionable.Comment: 21 pages, 34 ps-figures; Astronomy and Astrophysics accepte
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