Mapping gravity in stellar nurseries -- establishing the effectiveness of 2D acceleration maps
Zhen-Zhen He, Guang-Xing Li, Andreas Burkert

TL;DR
This study validates the use of 2D surface density maps to accurately estimate gravitational acceleration in star-forming regions, confirming their effectiveness despite some overestimations and deviations in complex structures.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates through simulations that 2D surface density-based acceleration maps reliably represent 3D gravitational fields in stellar nurseries, with quantified accuracy and limitations.
Findings
2D acceleration maps closely match mass-weighted projected 3D accelerations
Magnitudes are overestimated by a factor of approximately 2.3 due to projection effects
Maps remain aligned within 20 degrees except in complex line-of-sight regions
Abstract
Gravity is the driving force of star formation. Although gravity is caused by the presence of matter, its role in complex regions is still unsettled. One effective way to study the pattern of gravity is to compute the accretion it exerts on the gas by providing gravitational acceleration maps. A practical way to study acceleration is by computing it using 2D surface density maps, yet whether these maps are accurate remains uncertain. Using numerical simulations, we confirm that the accuracy of the acceleration maps computed from 2D surface density are good representations for the mean acceleration weighted by mass. Due to the under-estimations of the distances from projected maps, the magnitudes of accelerations will be over-estimated , where $\mathbf a_{\rm 3D}^{\rm…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
