Star formation in turbulent molecular clouds with colliding flow
Tomoaki Matsumoto, Kazuhito Dobashi, and Tomomi Shimoikura

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to explore how colliding flows influence the structure and star formation processes in turbulent molecular clouds, revealing distinct filamentary and density PDF features.
Contribution
It demonstrates the impact of colliding flows on filament formation, density PDFs, and star formation, providing new insights into molecular cloud evolution.
Findings
Colliding flows create finer filamentary networks.
PDFs are significantly deformed by colliding flows, showing double peaks.
Star mass distribution aligns with the classical initial mass function.
Abstract
Using self-gravitational hydrodynamical numerical simulations, we investigated the evolution of high-density turbulent molecular clouds swept by a colliding flow. The interaction of shock waves due to turbulence produces networks of thin filamentary clouds with a sub-parsec width. The colliding flow accumulates the filamentary clouds into a sheet cloud and promotes active star formation for initially high-density clouds. Clouds with a colliding flow exhibit a finer filamentary network than clouds without a colliding flow. The probability distribution functions (PDFs) for the density and column density can be fitted by lognormal functions for clouds without colliding flow. When the initial turbulence is weak, the column density PDF has a power-law wing at high column densities. The colliding flow considerably deforms the PDF, such that the PDF exhibits a double peak. The stellar mass…
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