Evolution of Prolate Molecular Clouds at HII Boundaries: I. Formation of fragment-core structures
Timothy M. Kinnear, Jingqi Miao, Glenn J. White, Simon Goodwin

TL;DR
This study uses SPH simulations to explore how EUV radiation influences the formation of dense core structures in prolate molecular clouds at HII boundaries, revealing conditions that favor star formation.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the role of EUV radiation in shaping core formation and distribution in prolate clouds, extending previous work focused on FUV backgrounds.
Findings
EUV radiation triggers high-density core formation in prolate clouds.
Core distribution varies with initial density, shape, and radiation penetration depth.
Star formation potential is higher in clouds with shallow EUV penetration and specific axial ratios.
Abstract
The evolution of a prolate cloud at an Hii boundary is investigated using Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH). The prolate molecular clouds in our investigation are set with their semi-major axis perpendicular to the radiative direction of a plane parallel ionising Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) flux. Simulations on three high mass prolate clouds reveal that EUV radiation can trigger distinctive high density core formation embedded in a final linear structure. This contrasts with results of the previous work in which only an isotropic Far Ultraviolet (FUV) interstellar background flux was applied. A systematic investigation on a group of prolate clouds of equal mass but different initial densities and geometric shapes finds that the distribution of the cores over the final linear structure changes with the initial conditions of the prolate cloud and the strength of the EUV radiation…
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