The Two States of Star Forming Clouds
David Collins, Alexei G. Kritsuk, Paolo Padoan, Hui Li, Hao Xu, Sergey, D. Ustyugov, Michael L. Norman

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to explore how self-gravity and magnetic fields influence turbulence in molecular clouds, revealing two distinct states with different properties and implications for star formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates the existence of two cloud states driven by gravity and magnetic fields, providing detailed statistical properties and insights into star formation processes.
Findings
Gravity causes clouds to split into low and high density states.
Low density state resembles non-self-gravitating turbulence.
High density state features self-similar collapsing spheres.
Abstract
We examine the effects of self-gravity and magnetic fields on supersonic turbulence in isothermal molecular clouds with high resolution simulations and adaptive mesh refinement. These simulations use large root grids (512^3) to capture turbulence and four levels of refinement to capture high density, for an effective resolution of 8,196^3. Three Mach 9 simulations are performed, two super-Alfv\'enic and one trans-Alfv\'enic. We find that gravity splits the clouds into two populations, one low density turbulent state and one high density collapsing state. The low density state exhibits properties similar to non-self-gravitating in this regime, and we examine the effects of varied magnetic field strength on statistical properties: the density probability distribution function is approximately lognormal; velocity power spectral slopes decrease with field strength; alignment between…
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