Is molecular cloud turbulence driven by external supernova explosions?
D. Seifried, S. Walch, S. Haid, P. Girichidis, T. Naab

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to assess whether external supernova explosions can sustain turbulence in molecular clouds, finding that their impact diminishes rapidly with distance and time, thus unlikely to be the main driver in typical galactic environments.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed simulation-based analysis showing that external supernovae are unlikely to sustain molecular cloud turbulence in typical conditions, highlighting the importance of local processes.
Findings
SN impact decreases rapidly with distance from the cloud.
Nearby SNe can temporarily boost turbulence by up to 70%.
SNe are ineffective at maintaining turbulence over cloud lifetimes in typical environments.
Abstract
We present high-resolution ( 0.1 pc), hydrodynamical and magnetohydrodynamical simulations to investigate whether the observed level of molecular cloud (MC) turbulence can be generated and maintained by external supernova (SN) explosions. The MCs are formed self-consistently within their large-scale galactic environment following the non-equilibrium formation of H and CO including (self-) shielding and important heating and cooling processes. The MCs inherit their initial level of turbulence from the diffuse ISM, where turbulence is injected by SN explosions. However, by systematically exploring the effect of individual SNe going off outside the clouds, we show that at later stages the importance of SN driven turbulence is decreased significantly. This holds for different MC masses as well as MCs with and without magnetic fields. The SN impact also decreases rapidly with…
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