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Massive core/star formation triggered by cloud-cloud collision: II High-speed collisions of magnetized clouds (2205.07057v1)

Published 14 May 2022 in astro-ph.GA

Abstract: We study the effects of the magnetic fields on the formation of massive, self-gravitationally bound cores (MBCs) in high-speed cloud-cloud collisions (CCCs). Extending our previous work (Sakre et al. 2021), we perform magnetohydrodynamic simulations following the high-speed (20 - 40 km s${-1}$) collisions between two magnetized (4 $\mu$G initially), turbulent clouds of different sizes in the range of 7 - 20 pc. We show that a magnetic field effect hinders the core growth, particularly after a short-duration collision during which cores cannot get highly bound. In such a case, a shocked region created by the collision rapidly expands to the ambient medium owing to the enhanced magnetic pressure, resulting in the destruction of the highly unbound cores and suppression of gas accretion to massive cores. This negative effect on the MBC formation is a phenomenon not seen in the past hydrodynamic simulations of similar CCC models. Together with our previous work, we conclude that the magnetic fields provide the two competing effects on the MBC formation in CCC; while they promote the mass accumulation into cores during a collision, they operate to destroy cores or hinder the core growth after the collision. The duration of collision determines which effect prevails, providing the maximum collision speed for the MBC formation with given colliding clouds. Our results agree with the observed trend among CCC samples in the corresponding column density range; clouds with higher relative velocity require higher column density for the formation of massive stars (Enokiya et al. 2021).

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