Less wrong: a more realistic initial condition for simulations of turbulent molecular clouds
Henry B. Lane, Michael Y. Grudi\'c, D\'avid Guszejnov, Stella S. R., Offner, Claude-Andr\'e Faucher-Gigu\`ere, and Anna L. Rosen

TL;DR
This paper introduces TURBSPHERE, a new simulation setup for molecular clouds that combines continuous turbulence driving with static confinement, producing more realistic initial conditions for star formation studies.
Contribution
The paper develops and tests TURBSPHERE, a novel method for initializing GMC simulations with realistic turbulence and boundary conditions, improving upon previous approaches.
Findings
External turbulence driving suppresses star formation.
Boundary conditions significantly affect star formation rates.
Periodic box simulations form stars more slowly.
Abstract
Simulations of isolated giant molecular clouds (GMCs) are an important tool for studying the dynamics of star formation, but their turbulent initial conditions (ICs) are uncertain. Most simulations have either initialized a velocity field with a prescribed power spectrum on a smooth density field (failing to model the full structure of turbulence) or "stirred" turbulence with periodic boundary conditions (which may not model real GMC boundary conditions). We develop and test a new GMC simulation setup (called TURBSPHERE) that combines advantages of both approaches: we continuously stir an isolated cloud to model the energy cascade from larger scales, and use a static potential to confine the gas. The resulting cloud and surrounding envelope achieve a quasi-equilibrium state with the desired hallmarks of supersonic ISM turbulence (e.g. density PDF and a velocity power…
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