The influence of magnetic fields in Cloud-Cloud Collisions
Theotokis Georgatos, Anthony P. Whitworth

TL;DR
This study uses SPH simulations to explore how magnetic fields influence the morphology and star formation processes in cloud-cloud collisions, revealing that magnetic fields delay collapse, alter filament structures, and favor the formation of centralized clusters.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based analysis of magnetic field effects on cloud-cloud collision outcomes, highlighting their role in shaping star formation morphology and timing.
Findings
Magnetic fields delay collapse and fragmentation.
Magnetic fields increase the velocity threshold for Hub Filament formation.
Magnetic fields promote centrally concentrated clusters.
Abstract
Cloud-cloud collisions are expected to trigger star formation by compressing gas into dense, gravitationally unstable regions. However, the role of magnetic fields in this process is unclear. We use SPH to model head-on collisions between two uniform density clouds, each with mass M, initial radius 2 pc, and embedded in a uniform magnetic field parallel to the collision velocity. As in the nonmagnetic case, the resulting shock-compressed layer fragments into a network of filaments. If the collision is sufficiently slow, the filaments are dragged into radial orientations by non-homologous gravitational contraction, resulting in a morphology, which spawns a centrally concentrated monolithic cluster with a broad mass function shaped by competitive accretion and dynamical ejections. If the collision is faster, a of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Dust and Plasma Wave Phenomena
