A possible link between the power spectrum of interstellar filaments and the origin of the prestellar core mass function
A. Roy, Ph. Andre', D. Arzoumanian, N. Peretto, P. Palmeirim, V., Konyves, N. Schneider, M. Benedettini, J. Di Francesco, D. Elia, T. Hill, B., Ladjelate, F. Louvet, F. Motte, S. Pezzuto, E. Schisano, Y. Shimajiri, L., Spinoglio, D. Ward-Thompson, G. White

TL;DR
This study analyzes the power spectrum of interstellar filaments and finds that their properties support the idea that the gravitational fragmentation of filaments influences the shape of the prestellar core mass function and the stellar initial mass function.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence linking filament power spectra to turbulence and fragmentation processes that shape the core mass function.
Findings
Filament power spectra follow a power-law with a slope near -1.6.
A correlation exists between power spectrum amplitude and mean column density.
Line-mass fluctuation dispersion scales with filament length as L^{0.7}.
Abstract
Two major features of the prestellar CMF are: 1) a broad peak below 1 Msun, presumably corresponding to a mean gravitational fragmentation scale, and 2) a characteristic power-law slope, very similar to the Salpeter slope of the stellar initial mass function (IMF) at the high-mass end. While recent Herschel observations have shown that the peak of the prestellar CMF is close to the thermal Jeans mass in marginally supercritical filaments, the origin of the power-law tail of the CMF/IMF at the high-mass end is less clear. Inutsuka (2001) proposed a theoretical scenario in which the origin of the power-law tail can be understood as resulting from the growth of an initial spectrum of density perturbations seeded along the long axis of filaments by interstellar turbulence. Here, we report the statistical properties of the line-mass fluctuations of filaments in nearby molecular clouds…
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