39 research outputs found
Formation of prestellar cores via non-isothermal gas fragmentation
Sheet-like clouds are common in turbulent gas and perhaps form via collisions
between turbulent gas flows. Having examined the evolution of an isothermal
shocked slab in an earlier contribution, in this work we follow the evolution
of a sheet-like cloud confined by (thermal)pressure and gas in it is allowed to
cool. The extant purpose of this endeavour is to study the early phases of
core-formation. The observed evolution of this cloud supports the conjecture
that molecular clouds themselves are three-phase media (comprising viz. a
stable cold and warm medium, and a third thermally unstable medium), though it
appears, clouds may evolve in this manner irrespective of whether they are
gravitationally bound. We report, this sheet fragments initially due to the
growth of the thermal instability and some fragments are elongated,
filament-like. Subsequently, relatively large fragments become gravitationally
unstable and sub-fragment into smaller cores. The formation of cores appears to
be a three stage process : first, growth of the thermal instability leads to
rapid fragmentation of the slab; second, relatively small fragments acquire
mass via gas-accretion and/or merger and third, sufficiently massive fragments
become susceptible to the gravitational instability and sub-fragment to form
smaller cores. We investigate typical properties of clumps (and smaller cores)
resulting from this fragmentation process. Findings of this work support the
suggestion that the weak velocity field usually observed in dense clumps and
smaller cores is likely seeded by the growth of dynamic instabilities.
Simulations were performed using the smooth particle hydrodynamics algorithm.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures; To appear in Pub. of Astronomical Soc. of
Australia (PASA); Resolution of rendered images has been reduced to make them
compatible with astroph. limit
Does a prestellar core always become protostellar? Tracing the evolution of cores from the prestellar to protostellar phase
Recently, a subset of starless cores whose thermal Jeans mass is apparently
overwhelmed by the mass of the core has been identified, e.g., the core {\small
L183}. In literature, massive cores such as this one are often referred to as
"super-Jeans cores". As starless cores are perhaps on the cusp of forming
stars, a study of their dynamics will improve our understanding of the
transition from the prestellar to the protostellar phase. In the present work
we use non-magnetic polytropes belonging originally to the family of the
Isothermal sphere. For the purpose, perturbations were applied to individual
polytropes, first by replacing the isothermal gas with a gas that was cold near
the centre of the polytrope and relatively warm in the outer regions, and
second, through a slight compression of the polytrope by raising the external
confining pressure. Using this latter configuration we identify thermodynamic
conditions under which a core is likely to remain starless. In fact, we also
argue that the attribute "super-Jeans" is subjective and that these cores do
not formally violate the Jeans stability criterion. On the basis of our test
results we suggest that gas temperature in a star-forming cloud is crucial
towards the formation and evolution of a core. Simulations in this work were
performed using the particle-based Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics algorithm.
However, to establish numerical convergence of the results we suggest similar
tests with a grid-scheme, such as the Adaptive mesh refinement.Comment: 14 pages, 24 figures and 1 table; To appear in Monthly Notices of the
Royal Astronomical Societ
On the impact of the magnitude of Interstellar pressure on physical properties of Molecular Cloud
Recently reported variations in the typical physical properties of Galactic
and extra-Galactic molecular clouds (MCs), and in their ability to form stars
have been attributed to local variations in the magnitude of interstellar
pressure. Inferences from these surveys have called into question two
long-standing beliefs that the MCs : 1 are Virialised entities and (2) have
approximately constant surface density i.e., the validity of the Larson's third
law. In this work we invoke the framework of cloud-formation via collisions
between warm gas flows. Post-collision clouds forming in these realisations
cool rapidly and evolve primarily via the interplay between the Non-linear Thin
Shell Instability (NTSI), and the self-gravity. Over the course of these
simulations we traced the temporal evolution of the surface density of the
assembled clouds, the fraction of dense gas, the distribution of gas column
density (NPDF), and the Virial nature of the assembled clouds. We conclude,
these physical properties of MCs not only exhibit temporal variation, but their
respective peak-magnitude also increases in proportion with the magnitude of
external pressure, . The velocity dispersion in assembled clouds
appears to follow the power-law, . Also,
the power-law tail at higher densities becomes shallower with increasing
magnitude of external pressure, for magnitudes,
K cm, at higher magnitudes such as those typically found in the Galactic
CMZ ( K cm), the power-law shows significant
steepening. Thus while our results are broadly consistent with inferences from
various recent observational surveys, it appears, MCs hardly exhibit a unique
set of properties, but rather a wide variety, that can be reconciled with a
range of magnitudes of pressure between 10 K cm - 10 K
cm.Comment: 20 pages, 11 Figures, 1 Table, To appear in Monthly Notice of the RA
On the star-forming ability of Molecular Clouds
The star-forming ability of a molecular cloud depends on the fraction of gas
it can cycle into the dense-phase. Consequently, one of the crucial questions
in reconciling star-formation in clouds is to understand the factors that
control this process. While it is widely accepted that the variation in ambient
conditions can alter significantly the ability of a cloud to spawn stars, the
observed variation in the star-formation rate in nearby clouds that experience
similar ambient conditions, presents an interesting question. In this work we
attempted to reconcile this variation within the paradigm of colliding flows.
To this end we develop self-gravitating, hydrodynamic realisations of identical
flows, but allowed to collide off-centre. Typical observational diagnostics
such as the gas-velocity dispersion, the fraction of dense-gas, the column
density distribution ({\small N-PDF}), the distribution of gas mass as a
function of -band extinction and the strength of compressional/solenoidal
modes in the post-collision cloud were deduced for different choices of the
impact parameter of collision. We find that a strongly sheared cloud is
terribly inefficient in cycling gas into the dense phase and that such a cloud
can possibly reconcile the sluggish nature of star-formation reported for some
clouds. Within the paradigm of cloud-formation via colliding flows this is
possible in case of flows colliding with a relatively large impact parameter.
We conclude that compressional modes - though probably essential - are
insufficient to ensure a relatively higher star-formation efficiency in a
cloud.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures; To appear in MNRA
On the evolution of irradiated turbulent clouds: A comparative study between modes of triggered star-formation
Here we examine the evolution of irradiated clouds using the Smoothed
Particle Hydrodynamics ({\small SPH}) algorithm coupled with a ray-tracing
scheme that calculates the position of the ionisation-front at each timestep.
We present results from simulations performed for three choices of {\small
IR}-flux spanning the range of fluxes emitted by a typical {\small B}-type star
to a cluster of {\small OB}-type stars. The extent of photo-ablation, of
course, depends on the strength of the incident flux and a strong flux of
{\small IR} severely ablates a {\small MC}. Consequently, the first
star-formation sites appear in the dense shocked layer along the edges of the
irradiated cloud. Radiation-induced turbulence readily generates dense
filamentary structure within the photo-ablated cloud although several new
star-forming sites also appear in some of the densest regions at the junctions
of these filaments. Prevalent physical conditions within a {\small MC} play a
crucial role in determining the mode, i.e., filamentary as compared to isolated
pockets, of star-formation, the timescale on which stars form and the
distribution of stellar masses. The probability density functions ({\small
PDF}s) derived for irradiated clouds in this study are intriguing due to their
resemblance with those presented in a recent census of irradiated {\small MC}s.
Furthermore, irrespective of the nature of turbulence, the protostellar
mass-functions({\small MF}s) derived in this study follow a power-law
distribution. When turbulence within the cloud is driven by a relatively strong
flux of {\small IR} such as that emitted by a massive {\small O}-type star or a
cluster of such stars, the {\small MF} approaches the canonical form due to
Salpeter, and even turns-over for protostellar masses smaller than 0.2
M.Comment: 13 pages, 19 figures, 3 tables. Rendered images of significantly
lowered resolution have been deliberately submitted to stay within the
maximum permissible limits of size. Also, the original abstract has been
shortened. To be published by the Monthly Notices of the RA
On the propensity of the formation of massive clumps via fragmentation of driven shells
Early type massive stars drive thin, dense shells whose edges often show
evidence of star-formation. The possibility of fragmentation of these shells,
leading to the formation of putative star-forming clumps is examined with the
aid of semi-analytic arguments. We also derive a mass-spectrum for clumps
condensing out of these shells by performing Monte-Carlo simulations of the
problem. By extending on results from our previous work on the stability of
thin, dense shells, we argue that clump-mass estimated by other authors in the
past, under a set of simplifying assumptions, are several orders of magnitude
smaller than those calculated here. Using the expression for the fastest
growing unstable mode in a shock-confined shell, we show that fragmentation of
a typical shell can produce clumps with a typical mass
M. It is likely that such clumps could spawn a second generation of
massive and/or intermediate-mass stars which could in turn, trigger the next
cycle of star-formation. We suggest that the ratio of shell thickness-to-radius
evolves only weakly with time. Calculations have been performed for stars of
seven spectral types, ranging from B1 to O5. We separately consider the
stability of supernova remnants.Comment: 17 pages; 5 Figures. Accepted for publication in New Astronom