The origin of a universal filament width in molecular clouds
Abstract
Filamentary structures identified in far-infrared observations of molecular clouds are typically found to have full-widths at half-maximum \!0.1 pc. However, the physical explanation for this phenomenon is currently uncertain. We use hydrodynamic simulations of cylindrically-symmetric converging flows to show that the full-width at half-maximum of the resulting filament's surface density profile, FWHM, is closely related to the location of the accretion shock, where the inflow meets the boundary of the filament. For inflow Mach Number, M, between 1 and 5, filament FWHMs fall in the range 0.03 pc FWHM 0.3 pc, with higher M resulting in narrower filaments. A large sample of filaments, seen at different evolutionary stages and with different values of M, naturally results in a peaked distribution of FWHMs similar in shape to that obtained from far-infrared observations of molecular clouds. However, unless the converging flows are limited to M 3, the peak of the distribution of FWHMs is below the observed 0.1 pc.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.