Gravitationally unstable, shocked layers of interstellar gas are produced by cloud-cloud collisions and by expanding nebulae around massive stars. We show that the resulting fragments are likely to be of high mass (≳ 7 M⊙), and initially well separated (i.e. weakly bound to one another, if at all). This result may explain why dynamically active regions tend to have a high efficiency of massive star formation, and why they tend to relax quickly into a self-propagating mode which generates sequences of OB subgroups. These tendencies are manifested on many scales, from local star-forming regions like Orion, through regions like 30 Doradus in the LMC, to the most IR-luminous starburst galaxies. We also show that, for a wide range of input parameters, gravitational fragmentation of a shocked layer occurs when the column density of hydrogen nuclei through the accumulating layer reaches a value ∼6× 1021 cm-2. This may be one reason for the mass-radius relation for molecular cloud clumps first noted by Larson.
CITATION STYLE
Whitworth, A. P., Bhattal, A. S., Chapman, S. J., Disney, M. J., & Turner, J. A. (1994). The preferential formation of high-mass stars in shocked interstellar gas layers. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 268(1), 291–298. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/268.1.291
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