Synthetic Large-Scale Galactic Filaments -- on their Formation, Physical Properties, and Resemblance to Observations
Catherine Zucker, Rowan Smith, Alyssa Goodman

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore the formation and properties of large-scale galactic filaments, showing they can largely be explained by galactic dynamics without feedback or self-gravity.
Contribution
It demonstrates that large-scale galactic filaments can form purely from galactic dynamics, providing a baseline for understanding their observed properties without feedback effects.
Findings
Large-scale filaments are rare, with about one per kpc^2 in projection.
Filaments in both arm and interarm regions can form due to galactic dynamics.
Observed giant molecular filaments are consistent with non-self-gravitating structures dominated by galactic dynamics.
Abstract
Using a population of large-scale filaments extracted from an AREPO simulation of a Milky Way-like galaxy, we seek to understand the extent to which observed large-scale filament properties (with lengths pc) can be explained by galactic dynamics alone. From an observer's perspective in the disk of the galaxy, we identify filaments forming purely due to galactic dynamics, without the effects of feedback or local self-gravity. We find that large-scale Galactic filaments are intrinsically rare, and we estimate that at maximum approximately one filament per should be identified in projection, when viewed from the direction of our Sun in the Milky Way. In this idealized scenario, we find filaments in both the arm and interarm regions, and hypothesize that the former may be due to gas compression in the spiral-potential wells, with the latter due to differential…
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