4.7 Article

On the star-forming ability of Molecular Clouds

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 474, Issue 1, Pages 1277-1287

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stx2781

Keywords

ISM: clouds; galaxies: ISM; galaxies: star formation

Funding

  1. Department of Science & Technology, Government Of India, under the Young Scientist Scheme [YSS/2014/000304]
  2. Royal Astronomical Society grant
  3. Institute for Computation at the Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics
  4. Emmy Noether Research Group on 'Accretion Flows and Feedback in Realistic Models of Massive Star Formation' - German Research Foundation (DFG) [KU 2849/3-1]

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The star-forming ability of a molecular cloud depends on the fraction of gas it can cycle into the dense-phase. Consequently, one of the crucial questions in reconciling star formation in clouds is to understand the factors that control this process. While it is widely accepted that the variation in ambient conditions can alter significantly the ability of a cloud to spawn stars, the observed variation in the star-formation rate in nearby clouds that experience similar ambient conditions, presents an interesting question. In this work, we attempted to reconcile this variation within the paradigm of colliding flows. To this end we develop self-gravitating, hydrodynamic realizations of identical flows, but allowed to collide off-centre. Typical observational diagnostics such as the gas-velocity dispersion, the fraction of dense-gas, the column density distribution (N-PDF), the distribution of gas mass as a function of K-band extinction and the strength of compressional/solenoidal modes in the post-collision cloud were deduced for different choices of the impact parameter of collision. We find that a strongly sheared cloud is terribly inefficient in cycling gas into the dense phase and that such a cloud can possibly reconcile the sluggish nature of star formation reported for some clouds. Within the paradigm of cloud formation via colliding flows this is possible in case of flows colliding with a relatively large impact parameter. We conclude that compressional modes - though probably essential are insufficient to ensure a relatively higher star-formation efficiency in a cloud.

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