The ISM in spiral galaxies: can cooling in spiral shocks produce molecular clouds?
Clare Dobbs, Simon Glover, Paul Clark, Ralf Klessen

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to show that spiral shocks alone can rapidly form molecular clouds in spiral galaxies without the need for local self-gravity, highlighting the role of shock compression and orbit crowding.
Contribution
It demonstrates that molecular clouds can form through spiral shock compression without requiring local self-gravity, emphasizing the importance of thermodynamics and shielding in cloud formation.
Findings
Gas cools rapidly in spiral shocks, forming molecular clouds.
Most gas in spiral arms is cold and atomic, with a significant fraction becoming molecular.
Interarm regions are dominated by warm atomic gas, with some cold clumps surviving.
Abstract
We investigate the thermodynamics of the ISM and the formation of molecular hydrogen through numerical simulations of spiral galaxies. The model follows the chemical, thermal and dynamical response of the disc to an external spiral potential. Self-gravity and magnetic fields are not included. The calculations demonstrate that gas can cool rapidly when subject to a spiral shock. Molecular clouds in the spiral arms arise through a combination of compression of the ISM by the spiral shock and orbit crowding. These results highlight that local self-gravity is not required to form molecular clouds. Self-shielding provides a sharp transition density, below which gas is essentially atomic, and above which the molecular gas fraction is >0.001. The timescale for gas to move between these regimes is very rapid (<~1 Myr). From this stage, the majority of gas generally takes between 10 to 20 Myr to…
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