On the impact of the magnitude of Interstellar pressure on physical properties of Molecular Cloud

Abstract

Recently reported variations in the typical physical properties of Galactic and extra-Galactic molecular clouds (MCs), and in their ability to form stars have been attributed to local variations in the magnitude of interstellar pressure. Inferences from these surveys have called into question two long-standing beliefs that the MCs : 1 are Virialised entities and (2) have approximately constant surface density i.e., the validity of the Larson's third law. In this work we invoke the framework of cloud-formation via collisions between warm gas flows. Post-collision clouds forming in these realisations cool rapidly and evolve primarily via the interplay between the Non-linear Thin Shell Instability (NTSI), and the self-gravity. Over the course of these simulations we traced the temporal evolution of the surface density of the assembled clouds, the fraction of dense gas, the distribution of gas column density (NPDF), and the Virial nature of the assembled clouds. We conclude, these physical properties of MCs not only exhibit temporal variation, but their respective peak-magnitude also increases in proportion with the magnitude of external pressure, Pext. The velocity dispersion in assembled clouds appears to follow the power-law, σgas Pext0.23. Also, the power-law tail at higher densities becomes shallower with increasing magnitude of external pressure, for magnitudes, Pext/kB 107 K cm-3, at higher magnitudes such as those typically found in the Galactic CMZ (Pext/kB > 107 K cm-3), the power-law shows significant steepening. Thus while our results are broadly consistent with inferences from various recent observational surveys, it appears, MCs hardly exhibit a unique set of properties, but rather a wide variety, that can be reconciled with a range of magnitudes of pressure between 104 K cm-3 - 108 K cm-3.

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