On the evolution of irradiated turbulent clouds: A comparative study between modes of triggered star-formation
S. Anathpindika, H.C. Bhatt

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore how irradiated turbulent clouds evolve under different IR fluxes, revealing how radiation influences star formation modes, timescales, and stellar mass distributions.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of star formation modes in irradiated clouds across various IR fluxes using SPH simulations with ray-tracing, highlighting the impact of radiation on cloud structure and star formation.
Findings
Photo-ablation depends on IR flux strength.
Filamentary structures form due to radiation-induced turbulence.
Protostellar mass functions follow a power-law, resembling Salpeter's distribution.
Abstract
Here we examine the evolution of irradiated clouds using the Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics ({\small SPH}) algorithm coupled with a ray-tracing scheme that calculates the position of the ionisation-front at each timestep. We present results from simulations performed for three choices of {\small IR}-flux spanning the range of fluxes emitted by a typical {\small B}-type star to a cluster of {\small OB}-type stars. The extent of photo-ablation, of course, depends on the strength of the incident flux and a strong flux of {\small IR} severely ablates a {\small MC}. Consequently, the first star-formation sites appear in the dense shocked layer along the edges of the irradiated cloud. Radiation-induced turbulence readily generates dense filamentary structure within the photo-ablated cloud although several new star-forming sites also appear in some of the densest regions at the junctions of…
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