Detection of two power-law tails in the probability distribution functions of massive GMCs

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Abstract

We report the novel detection of complex high column density tails in the probability distribution functions (PDFs) for three high-mass star-forming regions (CepOB3, MonR2, NGC 6334), obtained from dust emission observed with Herschel. The low column density range can be fitted with a lognormal distribution. A first power-law tail starts above an extinction (AV) of ~6-14. It has a slope of α=1.3-2 for the ρ∝r-αprofile for an equivalent density distribution (spherical or cylindrical geometry), and is thus consistent with free-fall gravitational collapse. Above AV~40, 60, and 140, we detect an excess that can be fitted by a flatter power-law tail with α > 2. It correlates with the central regions of the cloud (ridges/hubs) of size ~1pc and densities above 104cm-3. This excess may be caused by physical processes that slow down collapse and reduce the flow of mass towards higher densities. Possible are: (1) rotation, which introduces an angular momentum barrier, (2) increasing optical depth and weaker cooling, (3) magnetic fields, (4) geometrical effects, and (5) protostellar feedback. The excess/second power-law tail is closely linked to high-mass star-formation though it does not imply a universal column density threshold for the formation of (high-mass) stars.

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Schneider, N., Bontemps, S., Girichidis, P., Rayner, T., Motte, F., André, P., … Zavagno, A. (2015). Detection of two power-law tails in the probability distribution functions of massive GMCs. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters, 453(1), L41–L45. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnrasl/slv101

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