Clump morphology and evolution in MHD simulations of molecular cloud formation
Robi Banerjee, Enrique Vazquez-Semadeni, Patrick Hennebelle, Ralf, Klessen

TL;DR
This study uses 3D MHD simulations to analyze the formation, structure, and evolution of molecular cloud clumps, revealing their growth via phase-transition fronts, pressure balance, and magnetic field alignment.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the formation mechanisms, boundary characteristics, and magnetic properties of molecular cloud clumps in a magnetized, thermally bistable medium.
Findings
Clumps form through thermal instability in compressed layers.
Clumps grow mainly by accretion through phase-transition fronts.
Magnetic fields tend to align with velocity within clumps.
Abstract
Abridged: We study the properties of clumps formed in three-dimensional weakly magnetized magneto-hydrodynamic simulations of converging flows in the thermally bistable, warm neutral medium (WNM). We find that: (1) Similarly to the situation in the classical two-phase medium, cold, dense clumps form through dynamically-triggered thermal instability in the compressed layer between the convergent flows, and are often characterised by a sharp density jump at their boundaries though not always. (2) However, the clumps are bounded by phase-transition fronts rather than by contact discontinuities, and thus they grow in size and mass mainly by accretion of WNM material through their boundaries. (3) The clump boundaries generally consist of thin layers of thermally unstable gas, but these layers are often widened by the turbulence, and penetrate deep into the clumps. (4) The clumps are…
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