Criticality and convergence in Newtonian collapse
Tomohiro Harada, Hideki Maeda, Benoit Semelin

TL;DR
This paper investigates the critical behavior in the spherical collapse of isothermal gas under Newtonian gravity through numerical simulations, revealing self-similar solutions, scaling laws, and astrophysical implications for star formation.
Contribution
It identifies and characterizes critical phenomena and self-similar solutions in Newtonian gravitational collapse, connecting these findings to astrophysical processes.
Findings
Critical temperature matches virial temperature.
Collapse converges to Hunter's or Larson-Penston solutions.
Measured critical exponent is approximately 0.11.
Abstract
We study through numerical simulation the spherical collapse of isothermal gas in Newtonian gravity. We observe a critical behavior which occurs at the threshold of gravitational instability leading to core formation. For a given initial density profile, we find a critical temperature, which is of the same order as the virial temperature of the initial configuration. For the exact critical temperature, the collapse converges to a self-similar form, the first member in Hunter's family of self-similar solutions. For a temperature close to the critical value, the collapse first approaches this critical solution. Later on, in the supercritical case, the collapse converges to another self-similar solution, which is called the Larson-Penston solution. In the subcritical case, the gas bounces and disperses to infinity. We find two scaling laws: one for the collapsed mass in the supercritical…
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