Abstract

Poster - Splinter General   (Aula 1&2 / virtual plenum)

Properties of Molecular Clumps and Cores in Colliding Magnetized Flows

M. Weis, S. Walch, D. Seifried, S. Ganguly
University of Cologne

We simulate the formation of molecular clouds in colliding flows of warm neutral medium with the adaptive mesh refinement code Flash in eight simulations with varying initial magnetic field strength, between 0.01 -- 5 µG. We include a chemical network to treat heating and cooling and to follow the formation of molecular gas. The initial magnetic field strength influences the fragmentation of the forming cloud because it prohibits motions perpendicular to the field direction and hence impacts the formation of large-scale filamentary structures. Molecular clump and core formation occurs anyhow. We identify 3D-clumps and 3D-cores, which are defined as connected, CO-rich regions. Additionally, 3D-cores are heavily shielded. While we do not claim those 3D-objects to be directly comparable to observations, this enables us to analyse their full virial state. With increasing field strength, we find more fragments with a smaller average mass; yet the dynamics of the forming clumps and cores only weakly depends on the initial magnetic field strength. The molecular clumps are mostly unbound, probably transient objects, which eve{are} weakly confined by ram pressure or thermal pressure, indicating that they are swept up by the turbulent flow. They experience significant fluctuations in the mass flux through their surface, such that the Eulerian reference frame shows a dominant time-dependent term due to their indistinct nature. We define the cores to encompass highly shielded molecular gas. Most cores are in gravitational-kinetic equipartition and are well described by the common virial parameter alpha_vir while some undergo minor dispersion by kinetic surface effects.