Magnetic Fields and Fragmentation of Filaments in the Hub of California-X
Abstract
We present 850 μm polarization and C18O (3-2) molecular line observations toward the X-shaped nebula in the California molecular cloud using the JCMT SCUBA-2/POL-2 and HARP instruments. The 850 μm emission shows that the observed region includes two elongated filamentary structures (Fil1 and Fil2) having chains of regularly spaced cores. We measured the mass per unit length of the filament and found that Fil1 and Fil2 are thermally super- and subcritical, respectively, but both are subcritical if nonthermal turbulence is considered. The mean projected spacings ( S) of cores in Fil1 and Fil2 are 0.13 and 0.16 pc, respectively. S are smaller than 4×filament width expected in the classical cylinder fragmentation model. The large-scale magnetic field orientations shown by Planck are perpendicular to the long axes of Fil1 and Fil2, while those in the filaments obtained from the high-resolution polarization data of JCMT are disturbed, but those in Fil1 tend to have longitudinal orientations. Using the modified Davis-Chandrasekhar-Fermi (DCF) method, we estimated the magnetic field strengths (B pos) of filaments which are 11080 and 9060 μG. We calculated the gravitational, kinematic, and magnetic energies of the filaments, and found that the fraction of magnetic energy is larger than 60 % in both filaments. We propose that a dominant magnetic energy may lead the filament to be fragmented into aligned cores as suggested by Tang et al., and a shorter core spacing can be due to a projection effect via the inclined geometry of filaments or due to a non-negligible, longitudinal magnetic fields in case of Fil1.
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