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Title: Prestellar core formation, evolution, and accretion from gravitational fragmentation in turbulent converging flows

Journal Article · · Astrophysical Journal

We investigate prestellar core formation and accretion based on three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations. Our simulations represent local ∼1 pc regions within giant molecular clouds where a supersonic turbulent flow converges, triggering star formation in the post-shock layer. We include turbulence and self-gravity, applying sink particle techniques, and explore a range of inflow Mach numbers M=2−16. Two sets of cores are identified and compared: t{sub 1} cores are identified from a time snapshot in each simulation and represent dense structures in a single cloud map; t{sub coll} cores are identified at their individual time of collapse and represent the initial mass reservoir for accretion. We find that cores and filaments form and evolve at the same time. At the stage of core collapse, there is a well-defined, converged characteristic mass for isothermal fragmentation that is comparable to the critical Bonnor–Ebert mass at the post-shock pressure. The core mass functions (CMFs) of t{sub coll} cores show a deficit of high-mass cores (≳7 M{sub ⊙}) compared to the observed stellar initial mass function (IMF). However, the CMFs of t{sub 1} cores are similar to the observed CMFs and include many low-mass cores that are gravitationally stable. The difference between t{sub 1} cores and t{sub coll} cores suggests that the full sample from observed CMFs may not evolve into protostars. Individual sink particles accrete at a roughly constant rate throughout the simulations, gaining one core mass per freefall time even after the initial mass reservoir is accreted. High-mass sinks gain proportionally more mass at later times than low-mass sinks. There are outbursts in accretion rates, resulting from clumpy density structures falling into the sinks.

OSTI ID:
22883102
Journal Information:
Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 806, Issue 1; Other Information: Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA); Since 2009, the country of publication for this journal is the UK.; ISSN 0004-637X
Country of Publication:
United Kingdom
Language:
English