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Journal ArticleDOI

Self-similar collapse of isothermal spheres and star formation.

Frank H. Shu
- 01 Jun 1977 - 
- Vol. 214, pp 488-497
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TLDR
In this paper, the problem of the gravitational collapse of isothermal spheres by applying the similarity method to the gas-dynamic flow is considered, and two types of similarity solutions are obtained: one is the prototype for starting states which correspond to unstable hydrostatic equilibrium; the other, for states where the mass of the cloud slightly exceeds the maximum limit allowable for hydrostatic equilibria.
Abstract
We consider the problem of the gravitational collapse of isothermal spheres by applying the similarity method to the gas-dynamic flow. We argue that a previous solution obtained by Larson and Penston to describe the stages prior to core formation is physically artificial; however, we find that the flow following core formation does exhibit self-similar properties.The latter similarity solution shows that the inflow in the dense central regions proceeds virtually at free-fall before the material is arrested by a strong radiating shock upon impact with the surface of the core. Two types of similarity solutions are obtained: one is the prototype for starting states which correspond to unstable hydrostatic equilibrium; the other, for states where the mass of the cloud slightly exceeds the maximum limit allowable for hydrostatic equilibrium. In both cases, an r/sup -2/ law holds for the density distribution in the static or nearly static outer envelope, and an r/sup -3///sup 2/ law holds for the freely falling inner envelope. Rapid infall is initiated at the head of the expansion wave associated with the dropping of the central regions from beneath the envelope. A numerical example is presented which is shown to be in good agreement with the envelopemore » dynamics obtained in previous studies of star formation using hydrodynamic codes.« less

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The origin of rotation profiles in star-forming clouds

TL;DR: In this article, a simple analytic model for gravitational collapse of molecular clouds is proposed to estimate ages of protostars based solely on the observed rotation profile, and applied to young stellar objects such as L1527 IRS, TMC-1A and B335.
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Density distribution function of a self-gravitating isothermal compressible turbulent fluid in the context of molecular clouds ensembles

TL;DR: In this article, the probability distribution function of the mass density of a self-gravitating isothermal compressible turbulent fluid from its physics has been obtained under the assumption of steady state.
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Contraction Signatures toward Dense Cores in the Perseus Molecular Cloud

TL;DR: In this paper, an HCO+ (3-2)-and N2D-based molecular line survey was performed toward 91 dense cores in the Perseus molecular cloud using the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, to identify the fraction of starless and protostellar cores with systematic radial motions.
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Variations in the accretion rate and luminosity in gravitationally unstable protostellar disks

TL;DR: In this paper, a self-consistent modeling of a protostar and protostellar disk is carried out for early stages of their evolution, where the amplitude of the variations in the accretion rate and luminosity grows together with the sampling period.
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