Scale-free gravitational collapse as the origin of rho sim r⁻² density profile -- a possible role of turbulence in regulating gravitational collapse
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Astrophysical systems, such as clumps that form star clusters share a density profile that is close to $\rho \sim r^{-2}$. We prove analytically this density profile is the result of the scale-free nature of the gravitational collapse. Therefore, it should emerge in many different situations as long as gravity is dominating the evolution for a period that is comparable or longer than the free-fall time, and this does not necessarily imply an isothermal model, as many have previously believed. To describe the collapse process, we construct a model called the turbulence-regulated gravitational collapse model, where turbulence is sustained by accretion and dissipates in roughly a crossing time. We demonstrate that a $\rho \sim r^{-2}$ profile emerges due to the scale-free nature the system. In this particular case, the rate of gravitational collapse is regulated by the rate at which turbulence dissipates the kinetic energy such that the infall speed can be $20 - 50 \%$ of the free-fall speed(which also depends on the interpretation of the crossing time based on simulations of driven turbulence). These predictions are consistent with existing observations, which suggests that these clumps are in the stage of turbulence-regulated gravitational collapse. Our analysis provides a unified description of gravitational collapse in different environments.
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The efficiency per free-fall time as a ratio of the Star Formation Rate to the gas-infall rate in collapsing cores: dependence on the core definition, accretion, and radial structure
Simulations of collapsing cores find that ε_ff varies with core definition via density threshold, open vs closed boundaries, and initial density, with higher values in low-mass cores due to lower infall rates.
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