The role of magnetic field and stellar feedback in the evolution of filamentary structures in collapsing star-forming clouds
Paolo Suin, Doris Arzoumanian, Annie Zavagno, and Patrick Hennebelle

TL;DR
This study investigates how magnetic fields and stellar feedback influence the formation and evolution of filamentary structures in star-forming molecular clouds through numerical simulations.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the distinct evolutionary pathways of filaments under different magnetic field strengths and the overriding role of stellar feedback in late-stage cloud evolution.
Findings
Stronger magnetic fields lead to sparser, perpendicularly aligned filaments.
Weaker fields produce a central hub with parallel filaments.
HII region feedback realigns filaments regardless of initial conditions.
Abstract
Context: Filaments are common features in molecular clouds and they play a key role in star formation (SF). Studying their life cycle is essential to fully understand the SF process. Aims: We aim to characterise the impact of magnetic field () and stellar feedback on the evolution of filamentary structures in star-forming clouds. Methods: We performed two numerical simulations of a collapsing M cloud with different mass-to-flux ratios ( and ), including early stellar feedback (jets and HII regions). Using DisPerSE, we extracted the three-dimensional filamentary network and analysed its properties as it evolves throughout the SF event. Results: We observed that the filamentary network in the simulations follow two distinct evolutionary pathways. In the strongly magnetised case, the cloud maintains a sparser filamentary network, and the arising…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Magnetic and Electromagnetic Effects
