13 research outputs found
Spectral Properties of Compressible Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence from Numerical Simulations
We analyze the spectral properties of driven, supersonic compressible
magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence obtained via high-resolution numerical
experiments, for application to understanding the dynamics of giant molecular
clouds. Via angle-averaged power spectra, we characterize the transfer of
energy from the intermediate, driving scales down to smaller dissipative
scales, and also present evidence for inverse cascades that achieve
modal-equipartition levels on larger spatial scales. Investigating compressive
versus shear modes separately, we evaluate their relative total power, and find
that as the magnetic field strength decreases, (1) the shear fraction of the
total kinetic power decreases, and (2) slopes of power-law fits over the
inertial range steepen. To relate to previous work on incompressible MHD
turbulence, we present qualitative and quantitative measures of the
scale-dependent spectral anisotropy arising from the shear-Alfv\'{e}n cascade,
and show how these vary with changing mean magnetic field strength. Finally, we
propose a method for using anisotropy in velocity centroid maps as a diagnostic
of the mean magnetic field strength in observed cloud cores.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures; Ap.J., accepte
The generation of low-energy cosmic rays in molecular clouds
It is argued that if cosmic rays penetrate into molecular clouds, the total
energy they lose can exceed the energy from galactic supernovae shocks. It is
shown that most likely galactic cosmic rays interacting with the surface layers
of molecular clouds are efficiently reflected and do not penetrate into the
cloud interior. Low-energy cosmic rays ( GeV) that provide the primary
ionization of the molecular cloud gas can be generated inside such clouds by
multiple shocks arising due to supersonic turbulence.Comment: 11 pages, no figure
ANISOTROPIC FORMATION OF MAGNETIZED CORES IN TURBULENT CLOUDS
In giant molecular clouds (GMCs), shocks driven by converging turbulent flows
create high-density, strongly-magnetized regions that are locally sheetlike. In
previous work, we showed that within these layers, dense filaments and embedded
self-gravitating cores form by gathering material along the magnetic field
lines. Here, we extend the parameter space of our three-dimensional, turbulent
MHD core formation simulations. We confirm the anisotropic core formation model
we previously proposed, and quantify the dependence of median core properties
on the pre-shock inflow velocity and upstream magnetic field strength. Our
results suggest that bound core properties are set by the total dynamic
pressure (dominated by large-scale turbulence) and thermal sound speed c_s in
GMCs, independent of magnetic field strength. For models with Mach number
between 5 and 20, the median core masses and radii are comparable to the
critical Bonnor-Ebert mass and radius defined using the dynamic pressure for
P_ext. Our results correspond to M_core = 1.2 c_s^4/sqrt(G^3 rho_0 v_0^2) and
R_core = 0.34 c_s^2/sqrt(G rho_0 v_0^2) for rho_0 and v_0 the large-scale mean
density and velocity. For our parameter range, the median M_core ~ 0.1-1 M_sun,
but a very high pressure cloud could have lower characteristic core mass. We
find cores and filaments form simultaneously, and filament column densities are
a factor ~2 greater than the surrounding cloud when cores first collapse. We
also show that cores identified in our simulations have physical properties
comparable to those observed in the Perseus cloud. Superthermal cores in our
models are generally also magnetically supercritical, suggesting that the same
may be true in observed clouds.Comment: 32 pages, 15 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in Ap