Interstellar MHD Turbulence and Star Formation
Enrique Vazquez-Semadeni

TL;DR
This chapter reviews the complex interplay of turbulence, magnetic fields, and thermal processes in the interstellar medium, highlighting their roles in star formation and cloud evolution.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive synthesis of how turbulence, thermal instability, and magnetic fields influence star formation in the Galactic ISM, emphasizing new insights into cloud dynamics and feedback effects.
Findings
Turbulence in different ISM phases varies from subsonic to supersonic.
Thermal instability contributes to dense cloud formation and mass accretion.
Star formation is regulated by feedback in gravitationally collapsing clouds.
Abstract
This chapter reviews the nature of turbulence in the Galactic interstellar medium (ISM) and its connections to the star formation (SF) process. The ISM is turbulent, magnetized, self-gravitating, and is subject to heating and cooling processes that control its thermodynamic behavior. The turbulence in the warm and hot ionized components of the ISM appears to be trans- or subsonic, and thus to behave nearly incompressibly. However, the neutral warm and cold components are highly compressible, as a consequence of both thermal instability in the atomic gas and of moderately-to-strongly supersonic motions in the roughly isothermal cold atomic and molecular components. Within this context, we discuss: i) the production and statistical distribution of turbulent density fluctuations in both isothermal and polytropic media; ii) the nature of the clumps produced by thermal instability, noting…
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