Formation of the Musca filament: Evidence for asymmetries in the accretion flow due to a cloud-cloud collision
L. Bonne, S. Bontemps, N. Schneider, S. D. Clarke, D. Arzoumanian, Y., Fukui, K. Tachihara, T. Csengeri, R. Guesten, A. Ohama, R. Okamoto, R. Simon,, H. Yahia, H. Yamamoto

TL;DR
This study investigates the formation of the Musca filament, revealing that a cloud-cloud collision triggers asymmetric accretion flows and influences magnetic field bending, leading to the filament's structure and potential star formation.
Contribution
It provides new evidence linking cloud-cloud collisions to filament formation and asymmetric accretion, supported by detailed kinematic and chemical analysis.
Findings
Musca filament has a cold dense crest with a cylindrical geometry.
A separate warmer, less dense component called strands is connected to the crest.
Asymmetric kinematics and magnetic field bending suggest collision-triggered accretion.
Abstract
Context. Dense molecular filaments are ubiquituous in the interstellar medium, yet their internal physical conditions and formation mechanism remain debated. Aims. We study the kinematics and physical conditions in the Musca filament and the Chamaeleon-Musca complex to constrain the physics of filament formation. Methods. We produced CO(2-1) isotopologue maps with the APEX telescope that cut through the Musca filament. We further study a NANTEN2 CO(1-0) map of the Musca cloud and the HI emission of the Chamaeleon-Musca complex. Results. The Musca cloud contains multiple velocity components. Radiative transfer modelling of the CO emission indicates that the Musca filament consists of a cold (10 K), dense (n10 cm) crest, which is best described with a cylindrical geometry. Connected to the crest, a separate gas component at T15 K and…
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