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A&A 456, 171-177 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20065172
A method for detection of structure
M. Gustafsson1, J. L. Lemaire2 and D. Field11 Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Aarhus, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark
e-mail: maikeng@phys.au.dk
2 Observatoire de Paris & Université de Cergy-Pontoise, LERMA & UMR 8112 du CNRS, 92195 Meudon, France
(Received 9 March 2006 / Accepted 23 May 2006)
Abstract
Context.In order to understand the evolution of molecular clouds it
is important to identify the departures from self-similarity
associated with the scales of self-gravity and the driving of turbulence.
Aims. A method is described based on structure functions for
determining whether a region
of gas, such as a molecular cloud, is fractal or contains structure
with characteristic scale sizes.
Methods.Using artificial data containing structure it is shown that derivatives of
higher order structure functions provide a powerful way to detect
the presence of
characteristic scales should any be present and to estimate the size
of such structures. The method is applied
to observations of hot H2 in the Kleinman-Low nebula, north
of the Trapezium stars in the
Orion Molecular Cloud, including both brightness and velocity
data. The method is compared with other techniques such as Fourier
transform and histogram techniques.
Results. It is found that the density structure, represented by H2
emission brightness in the K-band (2-2.5
m),
exhibits mean characteristic sizes of 110, 550, 1700 and
2700 AU. The velocity data show the presence of structure at
140, 1500 and 3500 AU. Compared with other techniques such as Fourier
transform or
histogram, the method appears both more
sensitive to characteristic scales and easier to interpret.
Key words: ISM: individual objects: OMC1 -- ISM: structure -- ISM: kinematics and dynamics
© ESO 2006
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