4.7 Article

Filament fragmentation: density gradients suppress end-dominated collapse

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 525, Issue 3, Pages 3998-4007

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stad2517

Keywords

stars: formation; ISM: kinematics and dynamics; ISM: structure

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The onset of star formation is determined by the collapse of filaments in the interstellar medium. The edge effect plays a crucial role in the formation of cores through the collapse of filaments. However, current theoretical models often neglect the density gradient at the edges of filaments, which is a key parameter affecting fragmentation.
The onset of star formation is set by the collapse of filaments in the interstellar medium. From a theoretical point of view, an isolated cylindrical filament forms cores via the edge effect. Due to the self-gravity of a filament, the strong increase in acceleration at both ends leads to a pile-up of matter which collapses into cores. However, this effect is rarely observed. Most theoretical models consider a sharp density cut-off at the edge of the filament, whereas a smoother transition is more realistic and would also decrease the acceleration at the ends of the filament. We show that the edge effect can be significantly slowed down by a density gradient, although not completely avoided. However, this allows perturbations inside the filament to grow faster than the edge. We determine the critical density gradient for which the time-scales are equal and find it to be of the order of several times the filament radius. Hence, the density gradient at the ends of a filament is an essential parameter for fragmentation and the low rate of observed cases of the edge effect could be naturally explained by shallow gradients.

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