The Temperature of Interstellar Clouds from Turbulent Heating
Liubin Pan, Paolo Padoan

TL;DR
This paper models turbulent heating in interstellar clouds using an extended intermittency model, showing it can explain observed temperatures and chemical abundances, and highlighting its role in star formation.
Contribution
It introduces a new extension of the log-Poisson intermittency model for supersonic turbulence and applies it to interstellar cloud heating and chemistry.
Findings
Turbulent heating alone can explain the mean temperature in molecular clouds.
Turbulent heating can produce hot regions explaining CH+ abundance in HI clouds.
Intermittency effects are significant in the thermal balance and chemistry of interstellar clouds.
Abstract
To evaluate the effect of turbulent heating in the thermal balance of interstellar clouds, we develop an extension of the log-Poisson intermittency model to supersonic turbulence. The model depends on a parameter, d, interpreted as the dimension of the most dissipative structures. By comparing the model with the probability distribution of the turbulent dissipation rate in a simulation of supersonic and super-Alfvenic turbulence, we find a best-fit value of d=1.64. We apply this intermittency model to the computation of the mass-weighted probability distribution of the gas temperature of molecular clouds, high-mass star-forming cores, and cold diffuse HI clouds. Our main results are: i) The mean gas temperature in molecular clouds can be explained as the effect of turbulent heating alone, while cosmic ray heating may dominate only in regions where the turbulent heating is low; ii) The…
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