Back to Search Start Over

MHD simulation of the formation of clumps and filaments in quiescent diffuse medium by thermal instability

Authors :
Wareing, C. J.
Pittard, J. M.
Falle, S. A. E. G.
Sven Van Loo
Source :
NASA Astrophysics Data System
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2016.

Abstract

We have used the AMR hydrodynamic code, MG, to perform idealised 3D MHD simulations of the formation of clumpy and filamentary structure in a thermally unstable medium without turbulence. A stationary thermally unstable spherical diffuse atomic cloud with uniform density in pressure equilibrium with low density surroundings was seeded with random density variations and allowed to evolve. A range of magnetic field strengths threading the cloud have been explored, from beta=0.1 to beta=1.0 to the zero magnetic field case (beta=infinity), where beta is the ratio of thermal pressure to magnetic pressure. Once the density inhomogeneities had developed to the point where gravity started to become important, self-gravity was introduced to the simulation. With no magnetic field, clouds and clumps form within the cloud with aspect ratios of around unity, whereas in the presence of a relatively strong field (beta=0.1) these become filaments, then evolve into interconnected corrugated sheets that are predominantly perpendicular to the magnetic field. With magnetic and thermal pressure equality (beta=1.0), filaments, clouds and clumps are formed. At any particular instant, the projection of the 3D structure onto a plane parallel to the magnetic field, i.e. a line of sight perpendicular to the magnetic field, resembles the appearance of filamentary molecular clouds. The filament densities, widths, velocity dispersions and temperatures resemble those observed in molecular clouds. In contrast, in the strong field case beta=0.1, projection of the 3D structure along a line of sight parallel to the magnetic field reveals a remarkably uniform structure.<br />17 pages, 10 figures. Accepted to MNRAS, minor changes and additions to text, primarily in Section 6

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NASA Astrophysics Data System
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dbfc9a4a01606238b789e7029bf3bd59