4.7 Article

13CO filaments in the Taurus molecular cloud

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 444, Issue 3, Pages 2507-2524

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stu1601

Keywords

stars: formation; ISM: clouds; ISM: individual objects: Taurus; ISM: molecules; ISM: structure; radio lines: ISM

Funding

  1. FP7 through Marie Curie Career Integration Grant [PCIG- GA-2011-293531 FOnset]
  2. EU FP7 Grant [PIRSES-GA-2012-31578 EuroCal]
  3. RoboPol project
  4. European Social Fund (ESF)
  5. Greek National Resources

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We have carried out a search for filamentary structures in the Taurus molecular cloud using (CO)-C-13 line emission data from the Five Colleges Radio Astronomy Observatory survey of similar to 100 deg(2). We have used the topological analysis tool, Discrete Persistent Structures Extractor (DISPERSE), and post-processed its results to include a more strict definition of filaments that requires an aspect ratio of at least 3:1 and cross-section intensity profiles peaked on the spine of the filament. In the velocity-integrated intensity map only 10 of the hundreds of filamentary structures identified by DISPERSE comply with our criteria. Unlike Herschel analyses, which find a characteristic width for filaments of similar to 0.1 pc, we find a much broader distribution of profile widths in our structures, with a peak at 0.4 pc. Furthermore, even if the identified filaments are cylindrical objects, their complicated velocity structure and velocity dispersions imply that they are probably gravitationally unbound. Analysis of velocity channel maps reveals the existence of hundreds of 'velocity-coherent' filaments. The distribution of their widths is peaked at lower values (0.2 pc) while the fluctuation of their peak intensities is indicative of stochastic origin. These filaments are suppressed in the integrated intensity map due to the blending of diffuse emission from different velocities. Conversely, integration over velocities can cause filamentary structures to appear. Such apparent filaments can also be traced, using the same methodology, in simple simulated maps consisting of randomly placed cores. They have profile shapes similar to observed filaments and contain most of the simulated cores.

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