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      How do velocity structure functions trace gas dynamics in simulated molecular clouds?

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          Abstract

          Context. Supersonic disordered flows accompany the formation and evolution of MCs. It has been argued that turbulence can support against gravitational collapse and form hierarchical sub-structures. Aims. We study the time evolution of simulated MCs to investigate: What physical process dominates the driving of turbulent flows? How can these flows be characterised? Do the simulated flows agree with observations? Methods. We analyse three MCs that have formed self-consistently within kpc-scale numerical simulations of the ISM. The simulated ISM evolves under the influence of physical processes including self-gravity, stratification, magnetic fields, supernova-driven turbulence, and radiative heating and cooling. We characterise the flows using VSFs with/out density weighting or a density cutoff, and computed in one or three dimensions. Results. In regions with sufficient resolution, the density-weighted VSFs initially appear to follow the expectations for uniform turbulence consistent with Larson's size-velocity relationship. SN blast wave impacts produce short-lived coherent motions at large scales, increasing the scaling exponents for a crossing time. Gravitational contraction drives small-scale motions, producing scaling coefficients that drop or even turn negative as small scales become dominant. Conclusions. We conclude that two different effects coincidentally reproduce Larson's size velocity relationship. Initially, uniform turbulence dominates, so the energy cascade produces VSFs consistent with Larson's relationship. Later, contraction dominates, the density-weighted VSFs become much shallower or even inverted, but the relationship of the global average velocity dispersion of the MCs to their radius follows Larson's relationship, reflecting virial equilibrium or free-fall collapse. The injection of energy by shocks is visible in the VSFs, but decays within a crossing time.

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          Molecular Clouds: Internal Properties, Turbulence, Star Formation and Feedback

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            How do velocity structure functions trace gas dynamics in simulated molecular clouds?

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              11 August 2019
              Article
              10.5531/sd.astro.3
              1908.03951
              6dfa8005-eaad-4dca-bfc5-e9481656b086

              http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

              History
              Custom metadata
              21 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
              astro-ph.GA

              Galaxy astrophysics
              Galaxy astrophysics

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