Simulating star formation in molecular cloud cores I. The influence of low levels of turbulence on fragmentation and multiplicity
Simon P Goodwin, A P Whitworth & D. Ward-Thompson

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to show that even minimal turbulence in molecular cloud cores can lead to the formation of multiple star systems, matching observed properties without requiring large-scale rotation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that low levels of turbulence alone can produce multiple star systems, providing a new understanding of star formation mechanisms.
Findings
80% of cores form multiple systems
Average number of stars per core is 4.55
Binary semi-major axis median is ~30 au
Abstract
We present the results of an ensemble of simulations of the collapse and fragmentation of dense star-forming cores. We show that even with very low levels of turbulence the outcome is usually a binary, or higher-order multiple, system. We take as the initial conditions for these simulations a typical low-mass core, based on the average properties of a large sample of observed cores. All the simulated cores start with a mass of , a flattened central density profile, a ratio of thermal to gravitational energy and a ratio of turbulent to gravitational energy . Even this low level of turbulence is sufficient to produce multiple star formation in 80% of the cores; the mean number of stars and brown dwarfs formed from a single core is 4.55, and the maximum is 10. At the outset, the cores have no large-scale rotation.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure
