Rotating Filament In Orion B: Do Cores Inherit Their Angular Momentum From Their Parent Filament?

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL(2021)

引用 15|浏览23
暂无评分
摘要
Angular momentum is one of the most important physical quantities that governs star formation. The initial angular momentum of a core may be responsible for its fragmentation, and can have an influence on the size of the protoplanetary disk. To understand how cores obtain their initial angular momentum, it is important to study the angular momentum of filaments where they form. While theoretical studies on filament rotation have been explored, there exist very few observational measurements of the specific angular momentum in star-forming filaments. We present high-resolution N2D+ ALMA observations of the LBS 23 (HH24-HH26) region in Orion B, which provide one of the most reliable measurements of the specific angular momentum in a star-forming filament. We find the total specific angular momentum (4 x 10(20) cm(2) s(-1)), the dependence of the specific angular momentum with radius (j(r) proportional to r(1.83)), and the ratio of rotational energy to gravitational energy (beta(rot) similar to 0.04) comparable to those observed in rotating cores with sizes similar to our filament width (similar to 0.04 pc) in other star-forming regions. Our filament angular momentum profile is consistent with rotation acquired from ambient turbulence and with simulations that show cores and their host filaments develop simultaneously due to multi-scale growth of nonlinear perturbation generated by turbulence.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Star formation, Observational astronomy, Interstellar filaments, Stellar cores, Molecular clouds, Giant molecular clouds, Young stellar objects, Protostars, Herbig-Haro objects, Star-forming regions, Interstellar medium, Radio interferometry
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要