We study the equilibrium of pressure truncated, filamentary molecular clouds
that are threaded by rather general helical magnetic fields. We first derive a
new virial equation appropriate for magnetized filamentary clouds, which
includes the effects of non-thermal motions and the turbulent pressure of the
surrounding ISM. When compared with the data, we find that many filamentary
clouds have a mass per unit length that is significantly reduced by the effects
of external pressure, and that toroidal fields play a significant role in
squeezing such clouds.
We also develop exact numerical MHD models of filamentary molecular clouds
with more general helical field configurations than have previously been
considered. We also examine the effects of the equation of state by comparing
``isothermal'' filaments, with constant total (thermal plus turbulent) velocity
dispersion, with equilibria constructed using a logatropic equation of state.
We perform a Monte Carlo exploration of our parameter space to determine
which choices of parameters result in models that agree with the available
observational constraints. We find that both equations of state result in
equilibria that agree with the observational results. Moreover, we find that
models with helical fields have more realistic density profiles than either
unmagnetized models or those with purely poloidal fields; we find that most
isothermal models have density distributions that fall off as r^{-1.8} to
r^{-2}, while logatropes have density profiles that range from r^{-1} to
r^{-1.8}. We find that purely poloidal fields produce filaments with steep
density gradients that not allowed by the observations.Comment: 21 pages, 8 eps figures, submitted to MNRAS. Significant streamlining
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