An overview is presented of the main properties of the interstellar medium.
Evidence is summarized that the interstellar medium is highly turbulent, driven
on different length scales by various energetic processes. Large-scale
turbulence determines the formation of structures like filaments and shells in
the diffuse interstellar medium. It also regulates the formation of dense, cold
molecular clouds. Molecular clouds are now believed to be transient objects
that form on timescales of order 1e7 yrs in regions where HI gas is compressed
and cools. Supersonic turbulence in the compressed HI slab is generated by a
combination of hydrodynamical instabilities, coupled with cooling. Turbulent
dissipation is compensated by the kinetic energy input of the inflow. Molecular
hydrogen eventually forms when the surface density in the slab reaches a
threshold value of 1e21 cm^-2 at which point further cooling triggers the onset
of star formation by gravitational collapse. A few Myrs later, the newly formed
stars and resulting supernovae will disperse their molecular surrounding and
generate new expanding shells that drive again turbulence in the diffuse gas
and trigger the formation of a next generation of cold clouds. Although a
consistent scenario of interstellar medium dynamics and star formation is
emerging many details are still unclear and require more detailed work on
microphysical processes as well as a better understanding of supersonic,
compressible turbulence.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, to appear in "Statistical Mechanics of
Non-Extensive Systems", eds. F. Combes and R. Robert (Elsevier