Issue |
A&A
Volume 378, Number 1, October IV 2001
|
|
---|---|---|
Page(s) | 165 - 179 | |
Section | Interstellar and circumstellar matter | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20011181 | |
Published online | 15 October 2001 |
Protostellar collapse models of prolate molecular cloud cores
1
Centro de Física, Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, IVIC, Apartado 21827, Caracas 1020A, Venezuela
2
Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Nucleares, ININ Km. 36.5, Carretera México-Toluca, Ocoyoacac 52045, Estado de México, México e-mail: klapp@nuclear.inin.mx
Corresponding author: L. Di G. Sigalotti, lsigalot@einstein.ivic.ve
Received:
22
June
2001
Accepted:
22
August
2001
The continued detection of binary systems among pre-main-sequence stars suggests
that fragmentation is a very frequent process during the early stages of star
formation. However, the fragmentation hypothesis rests only upon the results of
three-dimensional hydrodynamics code calculations. The validity of isothermal
fragmentation calculations was questioned by the results of Truelove et al. (1997), and more recently, of Boss et al. (2000), who found, working at very high
spatial resolution, that a particular Gaussian cloud model collapsed isothermally
to form a singular filament rather than a binary or quadruple protostellar system
as predicted by previous calculations. Sufficiently high spatial resolution is
necessary to resolve the Jeans length and hence avoid artificial fragmentation
in isothermal collapse calculations. Here we use an adaptive, spherical-coordinate
hydrodynamics code based on the "zooming" coordinates to investigate the
isothermal collapse of centrally condensed (Gaussian), prolate (2:1 axial ratio)
cloud core models, with thermal energy and varied
rotational energy (
), to discern whether
they will still undergo fragmentation into a protostellar binary system, as
found in most previous prolate cloud collapse calculations, or condense all
the way into a thin filament, as suggested by the linear analysis of Inutsuka &
Miyama (1992) and the findings of Truelove et al. and Boss et al. for the spherical,
Gaussian cloud model. The prolate clouds all collapsed self-similarly to produce
an intermediate barlike core, which then shrank indefinetely into a singular filament
without fragmenting. Collapse of the bar into a thin filament also occurred
self-similarly, with the forming filaments being much longer than the Jeans length.
Since the filaments form at maximum densities that are typical of the transition
from the isothermal to the nonisothermal phase, gradual heating may retard
the collapse and allow fragmentation of the filament into a binary or multiple
protostellar core, as required to explain the high frequency of binary stars.
Key words: hydrodynamics / methods: numerical / stars: formation / binaries: general
© ESO, 2001
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