论文标题
由于热不稳定性和重力,冲击与分子云的相互作用与分子云的相互作用
Interactions of a shock with a molecular cloud at various stages of its evolution due to thermal instability and gravity
论文作者
论文摘要
使用自适应网状细化代码MG,我们对由于热不稳定性和重力而进行冲击与分子云的相互作用进行流体动力模拟。为了探讨这些过程的相对重要性,提出了三个案例研究。首先是由于热不稳定性和重力的影响,从最初静止的原子培养基中形成了分子云。第二种情况引入了冲击,而云仍处于温暖的原子阶段,一旦分子云形成,第三种情况就会引起冲击。冲击加速了云的全球崩溃,在此之前都经历了局部重力崩溃。当云仍然是原子的时,由于辐射冷却的壳体内的动态不稳定性,进化是冲击的主导,结构形成。虽然传输的冲击可以潜在地触发热不稳定性,但由于材料在云破碎的时间尺度上多次震惊,因此可以防止这种不稳定性。当云是分子时,震后流程是通过前期结构通过低密度区域间培养基中的持续结构引导的。团块被加速并变形,因为流动引起了在重力下崩溃的结块碰撞碰撞和合并。在有限的时期内,两个震惊的病例都表现出Kolmogorov和汉堡的混合物和湍流样速度和对数密度谱,以及密度较大的密度光谱。这项工作中介绍的云提供了现实的条件,这些条件将在未来的反馈研究中使用。
Using the adaptive mesh refinement code MG, we perform hydrodynamic simulations of the interaction of a shock with a molecular cloud evolving due to thermal instability and gravity. To explore the relative importance of these processes, three case studies are presented. The first follows the formation of a molecular cloud out of an initially quiescent atomic medium due to the effects of thermal instability and gravity. The second case introduces a shock whilst the cloud is still in the warm atomic phase, and the third scenario introduces a shock once the molecular cloud has formed. The shocks accelerate the global collapse of the clouds with both experiencing local gravitational collapse prior to this. When the cloud is still atomic, the evolution is shock dominated and structures form due to dynamical instabilities within a radiatively cooled shell. While the transmitted shock can potentially trigger the thermal instability, this is prevented as material is shocked multiple times on the order of a cloud crushing time-scale. When the cloud is molecular, the post-shock flow is directed via the pre-existing structure through low-density regions in the inter-clump medium. The clumps are accelerated and deformed as the flow induces clump-clump collisions and mergers that collapse under gravity. For a limited period, both shocked cases show a mixture of Kolmogorov and Burgers turbulence-like velocity and logarithmic density power spectra, and strongly varying density spectra. The clouds presented in this work provide realistic conditions that will be used in future feedback studies.