GRAVITATIONAL COLLAPSE AND FRAGMENTATION OF MOLECULAR CLOUD CORES

Author:

SIGALOTTI LEONARDO DI G.12,KLAPP JAIME3

Affiliation:

1. Centro de Física, Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas, IVIC, Apartado 21827, Caracas 1020A, Venezuela

2. Centro de Astrofísica Teórica, CAT, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Los Andes, Apartado Postal 26, La Hechicera, Mérida 5251, Venezuela

3. Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Nucleares, ININ, Km. 36.5, Carretera México-Toluca, Ocoyoacac 52045, Estado de México, México

Abstract

The detected multiplicity of main-sequence and pre-main-sequence stars along with the emerging evidence for binary and multiple protostars, imply that stars may ultimately form by fragmentation of collapsing molecular cloud cores. These discoveries, coupled with recent observational knowledge of the structure of dense cloud cores and of the properties of young binary stars, provide serious constraints to the theory of star formation. Most theoretical progress in the field of star formation is largely based on numerical calculations of the early collapse and fragmentation of protostellar clouds. Although these models have been quite successful at predicting the formation of binary protostars, a direct comparison between theory and observations has not yet been established. The results of recent observations as well as of early and recent analytic and numerical models, on which the present theory of star formation is based, are reviewed here in a self-consistent manner.

Publisher

World Scientific Pub Co Pte Lt

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics,Mathematical Physics

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