The CARMA-NRO Orion Survey: Filament Formation via Collision-Induced Magnetic Reconnection -- The Stick in Orion A

A unique filament is identified in the {\it Herschel} maps of the Orion A giant molecular cloud. The filament, which, we name the Stick, is ruler-straight and at an early evolutionary stage. Transverse position-velocity diagrams show two velocity components closing in on the Stick. The filament show...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2020-10
Hauptverfasser: Kong, Shuo, Ossenkopf-Okada, Volker, Arce, Héctor G, Bally, John, Sánchez-Monge, Álvaro, McGehee, Peregrine, Suri, Sümeyye, Klessen, Ralf S, Carpenter, John M, Lis, Dariusz C, Nakamura, Fumitaka, Schilke, Peter, Smith, Rowan J, Mairs, Steve, Goodman, Alyssa, Maureira, María José
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A unique filament is identified in the {\it Herschel} maps of the Orion A giant molecular cloud. The filament, which, we name the Stick, is ruler-straight and at an early evolutionary stage. Transverse position-velocity diagrams show two velocity components closing in on the Stick. The filament shows consecutive rings/forks in C\(^{18}\)O(1-0) channel maps, which is reminiscent of structures generated by magnetic reconnection. We propose that the Stick formed via collision-induced magnetic reconnection (CMR). We use the magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) code Athena++ to simulate the collision between two diffuse molecular clumps, each carrying an anti-parallel magnetic field. The clump collision produces a narrow, straight, dense filament with a factor of \(>\)200 increase in density. The production of the dense gas is seven times faster than free-fall collapse. The dense filament shows ring/fork-like structures in radiative transfer maps. Cores in the filament are confined by surface magnetic pressure. CMR can be an important dense-gas-producing mechanism in the Galaxy and beyond.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2011.00183