On the universality of interstellar filaments: theory meets simulations and observations
Christoph Federrath

TL;DR
This study combines high-resolution simulations and theoretical modeling to demonstrate that turbulence-driven sonic scales determine the universal filament width in molecular clouds, aligning well with observations.
Contribution
The paper introduces a theoretical model linking filament width to the sonic scale of turbulence, supported by simulations and observational data.
Findings
Turbulence simulations produce realistic filament widths (~0.10 pc).
Gravity-only simulations yield narrower filaments than observed.
The derived sonic scale matches observed filament widths in the Milky Way.
Abstract
Filaments are ubiquitous in the universe. Recent observations have revealed that stars and star clusters form preferentially along dense filaments. Understanding the formation and properties of filaments is therefore a crucial step in understanding star formation. Here we perform three-dimensional high-resolution magnetohydrodynamical simulations that follow the evolution of molecular clouds and the formation of filaments and stars. We apply a filament detection algorithm and compare simulations with different combinations of physical ingredients: gravity, turbulence, magnetic fields and jet/outflow feedback. We find that gravity-only simulations produce significantly narrower filament profiles than observed, while simulations that include turbulence produce realistic filament properties. For these turbulence simulations, we find a remarkably universal filament width of 0.10 +/- 0.02…
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