Was a cloud-cloud collision the trigger of the recent star formation in Serpens?
A. Duarte-Cabral, C. L. Dobbs, N. Peretto, G. A. Fuller

TL;DR
This study uses SPH simulations and observations to investigate whether a cloud-cloud collision triggered recent star formation in the Serpens Main Cluster, finding supporting evidence for this scenario.
Contribution
It demonstrates that an asymmetric cloud collision can reproduce observed features and velocity structures in Serpens, providing a plausible trigger for star formation there.
Findings
Collision reproduces observed velocity field
Asymmetric collision explains filament structures
Supports collision-triggered star formation hypothesis
Abstract
The complexity of the ISM is such that it is unlikely that star formation is initiated in the same way in all molecular clouds. While some clouds seem to collapse on their own, others may be triggered by an external event such as a cloud/flow collision forming a gravitationally unstable enhanced density layer. This work tests cloud-cloud collisions as the triggering mechanism for star formation in the Serpens Main Cluster as has been suggested by previous work. A set of smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations of the collision between two cylindrical clouds are performed and compared to (sub)millimetre observations of the Serpens Main Cluster. A configuration has been found which reproduces many of the observed characteristics of Serpens, including some of the main features of the peculiar velocity field. The evolution of the velocity with position throughout the model is…
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