Accretion-Driven Turbulence as Universal Process: Galaxies, Molecular Clouds, and Protostellar Disks
Ralf S. Klessen (Zentrum fuer Astronomie der Universitaet Heidelberg),, Patrick Hennebelle (Ecole Normale Superieure et Observatoire de Paris)

TL;DR
This paper proposes that accretion processes universally drive turbulence in various astrophysical systems, including galaxies, molecular clouds, and protostellar disks, supported by simulations and observational comparisons.
Contribution
It introduces a unified framework showing accretion as the primary driver of turbulence across different cosmic structures, supported by analytical and numerical analysis.
Findings
Accretion explains observed turbulence levels in Milky Way galaxies.
Molecular cloud turbulence is driven by accretion during cloud formation.
Accretion can induce subsonic turbulence in protoplanetary disks.
Abstract
Complex turbulent motions are ubiquitously observed in many astrophysical systems. Their origin, however, is still poorly understood. When cosmic structures form, they grow in mass via accretion from the surrounding environment. We propose that this accretion is able to drive internal turbulent motions in a wide range of astrophysical objects and study this process in the case of galaxies, molecular clouds and protoplanetary disks. We use a combination of numerical simulations and analytical arguments to predict the level of turbulence as a function of the accretion rate, the dissipation scale, and the density contrast, and compare with observational data. We find that in Milky Way type galaxies the observed level of turbulence in the interstellar medium can be explained by accretion, provided that the galaxies gain mass at a rate comparable to the rate at which they form stars. This…
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