On the typical width of Herschel filaments
Ph. Andr\'e, P. Palmeirim, D. Arzoumanian

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the observed ~0.1 pc filament width in Herschel data is a true physical scale or an artifact of resolution, concluding it likely reflects a real characteristic of molecular cloud structures.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that the typical filament width is a genuine physical scale, not solely due to observational resolution, by analyzing resolution effects and comparing with synthetic models.
Findings
Measured widths increase with resolution degradation, consistent with beam convolution effects.
The typical filament width of ~0.1 pc is likely a true physical scale.
This scale may correspond to the magnetized turbulent correlation length in molecular clouds.
Abstract
Herschel studies suggest that nearby (d < 500 pc) molecular filaments have a typical half-power width ~0.1pc, but this finding has been questioned on the ground that the measured widths tend to increase with distance. Here we revisit the dependence of measured filament widths on distance or equivalently spatial resolution, in an effort to determine whether nearby molecular filaments have a characteristic half-power width or whether this is an artifact of the finite resolution of the Herschel data. We perform a convergence test on the B211/213 filament in Taurus, by degrading the resolution of the Herschel data several times and re-estimating the filament width from the resulting column density profiles. We also compare the widths measured for the Taurus filament and other filaments from the Herschel Gould Belt survey to those found for synthetic filaments with various types of simple,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory · History and Developments in Astronomy · Mathematics and Applications
