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ABSTRACT In order to develop a complete theory of star formation, one essentially needs to know two things: what collapses and how long it takes. This is the second paper in a series, where we query how long a parcel of gas takes to collapse and the process it undergoes. We embed pseudo-Lagrangian tracer particles in simulations of collapsing molecular clouds, identify the particles that end in dense knots, and then examine the collapse history of the gas. We find a nearly universal behaviour of cruise-then-collapse, wherein a core stays at intermediate densities for a significant fraction of its life before finally collapsing. We identify time immediately before each core collapses, t ₒ₈₍₆, and examine how it transitions to high density. We find that the time to collapse is uniformly distributed between 0. 25 t ₅₅ and the end of the simulation at \!\! 1 t ₅₅, and that the duration of collapse is universally short, t 0. 1 t ₅₅, where t ₅₅ is the free-fall time at the mean density. We describe the collapse in three stages: collection, hardening, and singularity. Collection sweeps low-density gas into moderate density. Hardening brings kinetic and gravitational energies into quasi-equipartition. Singularity is the free-fall collapse, forming an envelope in rough energy balance and central overdensity in \!\! 0. 1 t ₅₅.
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David Collins
Dan K Le
Luz L Jimenez Vela
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Florida State University
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Collins et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e63c18b6db6435875ce2d6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stae1493