Gravitational fragmentation caught in the act: the filamentary Musca molecular cloud
Jouni Kainulainen, Alvaro Hacar, Jo\~ao Alves, Henrik Beuther, Herv\'e, Bouy, Mario Tafalla

TL;DR
This study investigates the early stages of filament fragmentation in the Musca molecular cloud, providing observational evidence that supports gravitational fragmentation models and highlights the cloud's subsonic, velocity-coherent nature.
Contribution
It offers a detailed case study of filament fragmentation in a molecular cloud, comparing observations with theoretical models to understand the process.
Findings
The Musca cloud is fragmented at its ends but has a well-defined central filament.
The filament's line mass and radial profile are consistent with gravitational fragmentation.
Fragment separation matches predictions from gravitational fragmentation models.
Abstract
Filamentary structures are common in molecular clouds. Explaining how they fragment to dense cores is a missing step in understanding their role in star formation. We perform a case study of whether low-mass filaments are close-to hydrostatic prior to their fragmentation, and whether their fragmentation agrees with gravitational fragmentation models. For this, we study the 6.5 pc long Musca molecular cloud that is an ideal candidate for a filament at an early stage of fragmentation. We employ dust extinction mapping in conjunction with near-infrared data from the NEWFIRM instrument, and 870 um dust continuum emission data from the LABOCA instrument, to estimate column densities. We use the data to identify fragments from the cloud and to determine the radial density distribution of its filamentary part. We compare the cloud's morphology with 13CO and C18O line emission observed with the…
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