Star Formation in Self-Gravitating Molecular Cloud: The Critical Mass and the Core Accretion Rate ()
1. Introduction
The study of star formation provides important information to understand the process of planet formation and the evolution of galaxy. Since, the formation of stars and planets in molecular clouds is a crucial field of study in astronomy and astrophysics. As stated by [1] molecular cloud (MC) is the dense and cool region in interstellar medium (ISM), and its size assumed to be ~0.1 pc to ~100 pc. It provides raw material for star and planet formation. However, how and why the cloud collapses to form star is another key question in astronomy. The boundaries of MCs are determined using the transitions from molecular gas like H2 to the atomic gas commonly H [2] [3]. The number of particles per unit volume (n) of the densest parts of MC is approximated to
[4], temperature of this densest region is
. It is in this region where star formation is actively going on. Stars form over a wide mass range from 0.08Me up to 150Me and beyond (see [5] [6]). In our case, we mainly focus on low and intermediate star forming critical mass of the cloud and its core accretion rate.
As illustrated by [7] the majority of stars (~90%) are low mass stars with masses less than 0.8Me, whereas about 10% are intermediate-mass stars have masses between 0.8 and 8Me, where as stars with masses (
) are said to be massive stars, they are only about 1% of all stars. There is a big difference between massive star formation processes and low mass star formation processes. The peculiar property of high mass star formation is that the young star accretes mass even if it begun nuclear fusion. No one is entirely sure what the dominant and unavoidable pressure force in addition to gravity in contracting MCs to star is another critical issue in astrophysics. As [8] and [9] explained that supersonic turbulence will dissipate on the free-fall time scale, and magnetic pressure cannot stop the collapse [10] [11]. So that the concept of star formation in a cloud contracting by its own gravity needs additional understanding with its thermodynamic properties as we thought.
According to [12] [13] [14] cold MCs have been heated by the photons emitted by high mass stars and inhibit the collapse of a cloud. On the other hand, [15] [16] explained super nova (SN) explosions and the HII region expansion collect the gas together and trigger star formation in galaxies. The effects of these feedbacks are important in regulating star formation in galaxies [17]. What if no external agents, the role of gravity in SF? The central core accretion rate is in the early collapse phase of MC. Thus, in this study we mainly focus on formulating another alternative of critical mass and the core accretion rate.
As described by [1] pre-stellar core is the first collapsed region of the star forming MC. In the low star forming region the pre-stellar core mass is from ~0.5Me to 10Me, but the hydrostatic object found at the center of the core is termed as protostar. The hydrostatic core grows to star via accretion of the material onto the central core from the envelope. Moreover, how the central core accretion rate can theoretically be explained is a crucial to theoretical astrophysics, thus this paper aims to formulate equation of the core accretion based on the critical mass we modelled in our earlier paper [18].
On the other way, the mass infall rate of the central core has not yet been theoretically modelled based on the parent cloud property including thermodynamic efficiency factor. Therefore, we model equation of core accretion rate of the central core or very young protostar which is embedded in the center of initially collapsing MC or pre-stellar core. The purpose of the study is: formulating critical mass (Jeans mass) of self-gravitating molecular cloud and mathematically formulating core accretion rate. Describe the hierarchy from fragmentation to star formation through invoking an efficiency factor
into equation of radiation luminosity. The general method we apply is theoretical modelling followed by numerical calculation.
Review of the Jeans Mass & Bonnor-Ebert Mass Scale
The jeans mass scale and the Bonner-Ebert mass scale are the classic mass scales for the contraction of a gravitating MC. Jeans mass: is Minimum or critical mass that is necessary to initiate the spontaneous collapse of the cloud. We believe that stars form when a portion of a molecular cloud collapses gravitationally. Since this collapse is resisted by various things, and there is evidence for many molecular clouds that have not collapsed, it is clear that the collapse initiating star formation occurs only under some circumstances. Can we find a simple condition that tells us when a cloud becomes unstable to collapse? This question was answered in a very simple model by James Jeans, who showed that for a cloud of a given radius and temperature, there is a critical mass that is now called the Jeans mass. If it is exceeded, the cloud becomes unstable to collapse. The Jeans mass depends on the radius of the cloud, its temperature, and the average mass of the particles in the cloud. The Jeans mass is determined by asking when the magnitude of the gravitational potential energy exceeds the magnitude
of the gas kinetic energy. It is given by
where k is
the Boltzmann constant,
the temperature,
the density of the cloud,
the radius of the cloud, G the gravitational constant, and
the average mass of a gas particle. If the cloud’s mass exceeds this value, gravity can overcome the gas kinetic energy and initiate collapse.
Bonner-Ebert Mass Scale: is the maximum mass for an isothermal sphere embedded in a pressurized medium in hydrostatic equilibrium (in the absence of magnetic fields and turbulence), the Bonnor-Ebert mass is given by
where
is the surface
pressure (Bonnor, 1956; Ebert, 1957). Clouds with
cannot be prevented from collapsing by thermal pressure alone.
Magnetic Filed Mass Scale: Magnetic fields alone cannot prevent gravitational collapse in clouds with
is given by
where
is the
magnetic flux in the cloud, and
is a constant which depends on the configuration of the magnetic field. Clouds with
and
are said to be magnetically supercritical and subcritical respectively. Apart from these classical models, in this paper, we formulate the critical mass with respect to radius, temperature and the ratio of radiation luminosity to gravitational luminosity of the collapsing cloud through reviewing our published paper (i.e. [18]). In addition we model core accretion rate in two ways.
2. Basic Equations and Concepts
In this section we describe gravitational potential energy of a spherical cloud, the released energy during collapse, gravitational energy released per free-fall time, and setting assumptions to derive relation between gravitational luminosity and radiation luminosity.
2.1. Gravitational Potential Energy of a Spherical Cloud
The total gravitational potential (binding) energy of a sphere cloud of uniform density is given by
(1)
where
is the mass contained in radius r. The gravitational potential energy of a system is the energy required to assemble the mass by bringing matter from infinity to the point of interest. Substituting
, and
Equation (1) becomes
Substituting
we have
(2)
Therefore, a spherical cloud with mass
, density
and radius
has gravitational energy given by
(3)
where c is a constant depending on the cloud density. We choose the value of this constant either 3/5 or 1 when we assume spherical uniform density cloud or need to consider uncertainty respectively [18]. From the Virial theorem
, this indicates that gravitational energy and the internal energy are in balance means the MCs neither collapse nor expand. The total energy of the system is related to gravitational potential energy
by
, it implies that the internal energy must increase
as the gravitational energy goes to negative. The total energy (
) is negative means the molecular cloud is bound and stable. Which must be negative as cloud is bound (i.e.
), gravitational systems tend to do this very rapidly, a bound system that is not in virial equilibrium will change its configuration very rapidly to get into virial equilibrium.
This idea rests on the fact that the gravitational energy
has a negative sign, and it is a confining agent, while the internal energies (thermal, kinetic, or magnetic) are positive, and they are assumed to act as supporting agents against collapse. It is frequently described in the literature that if
, the cloud must be contracting, while
implies that the
cloud is expanding. For the MC to collapse
.
2.2. The Time Scale
The characteristic time scale associated with contraction of self-gravitating molecular cloud is the free-fall time. The time scale of star formation under a self-gravitating cloud is often estimated by this time scale or the time it would take a cloud to collapse to a point in the absence of any other forces. By neglecting pressure gradients, the free fall time for spherically symmetric homogeneous collapsing cloud with mass
and radius
is given by
(4)
where
is the initial density of the molecular cloud under consideration.
2.3. Assumptions and Approximations
We choose the value of c in Equation (3) is 3/5 for a uniform density assumption and 1 otherwise. However, the density profile of the molecular cloud is more likely to be centrally peaked, so we suggested using a numerical factor of order unity to express the small uncertainty. When a cloud core is collapsing under its own gravity, half of its total gravitational energy is radiated away and half goes to internal energy according to the Virial theorem. However, we assume that the amount of gravitational energy released during the collapse is not completely (100%) liberated away in the form of radiation. Therefore, some part of the released energy may be trapped by other cosmic matter at the boundary without being involved in changing temperature of the collapsing cloud core. Due to this reason we impose a dimensionless thermodynamic factor
which we quantify it as
(5)
where
is the radiation luminosity of the collapsing cloud at its effective temperature and
is the gravitational luminosity in free-fall time.
2.4. The Released Energy during Collapse
The gravitational energy released when a cloud of radius
collapsed to the surface of a pre-stellar of radius
(see [18]) is given by
(6)
(7)
(8)
Here we assumed
. This implies the energy released is mainly dependent
on the core radius, the radius of the core. However, when we consider the total gravitational energy released by the cloud of mass
is more sensitive to the parent cloud radius the gravitational energy is expressed as
, therefore, we set out two different mathematical
frameworks. Half of the energy described in Equation (8) is liberated according to the Virial theorem, thus we have
(9)
is read as the gravitational energy radiated away.
2.5. Gravitational Energy Released per Free-Fall Time
To undergo free fall the gravitational energy of the cloud has to dominate other forms of energy pressures opposing it. Remembering that the gravitational pressure is dominating the counteracting pressures and the MC is falling to the central region. Now we can calculate the luminosity due to gravity in-terms of the free fall time as
(10)
Thus using
in Equation (4), Equation (8) and Equation (10) we have
(11)
After substituting the value of G and doing little manipulation
is formulated by [18] ad is given by
(12)
where
and
are the mass and radius of the parent cloud respectively,
gravitational luminosity and
,
(
) is
denotes the initial density of the cloud. From the general gravitational energy released Equation (11) becomes
. Note that we have been using
for the parent
cloud radius before fragmented into cores, and
is the radius of the core after initial cloud fragmented or collapsed to pre-stellar core. If cloud cools enough, Jeans instability allows gravity to overtake thermal energy. The densest parts of the cloud become gravitationally unstable and fragmentation occurs. It is after this fragmentation
has been assumed. For small initial cloud with very small Jeans mass the core radius becomes the radius of the pre-stellar core formed from the rapid collapse of the initial cloud. Thus there is a clear difference between
and
in this paper.
3. Results
3.1. Theoretical Modelling of Critical Mass and Core Accretion Rate
In this section we adopt the assumption and procedures which have been used in our previous paper (see [18]), and describe
as well as to obtain the initial mass of a cloud, thus
(13)
and remodel critical mass in two different ways to avoid some ambiguity. Where
,
is Stefan-Boltzmann’s constant,
is the cloud’s temperature. Then from Equation (13) we have
(14)
implies
(15)
When we turn to the general method i.e. if the gravitational energy liberated is more influenced by the parent cloud radius we have
. Therefore, we set two solutions of the cloud mass as
(16)
where
, As the rate of releasing gravitational energy per unit time is increasing the minimum mass required for collapse reduces. On the other hand, where there is no release of gravitational energy there is no collapse. Equation (16) shows large critical mass has large radius, and the
smaller the radius of the cloud the smaller is its critical mass. Hence we considered
, then from Equation (15).
Thus
(17)
The radius from Equation (15) is obtained as
leads to
rearranging this we have
(18)
From Equation (18)
temperature of the critical mass is
(19)
How the thermodynamic efficiency factor is governing the critical mass of self-gravitating cloud is displayed in Figure 1. Figures 1-4 indicate the total critical mass contained in the radii with the other physical parameters addressed in their captions. Since the Jeans mass is a minimum mass, the unstable collapsing cloud could begin with a very large mass, may be even thousands of solar masses. So why, don’t we get such massive stars? There are a lot of reasons, but one is that as the density increases hugely, the temperature becomes very low, the radius reduces rapidly, and as the ratio of radiation to gravitational energy increases. Thus the Jeans mass becomes smaller, and so large clouds will fragment. Final fragments will tend to be on the order of a solar mass. Thus, an initial massive collapsing cloud will fragment into many small collapsing protostars lead star cluster. For the diffuse HI cloud the critical mass is about thousands of solar mass, whereas molecular cloud core has critical mass of solar mass scale.
![]()
Figure 1. Luminosity ratio (
) vs critical mass. When a cloud of radius Rc ~1 pc-1.99 pc collapsed to Rcore ~0.0001 pc to 0.00109 pc in the run with indicated temperatures in the plot The plot is obtained from Equation (15).
![]()
Figure 2. The formed core radius (
) vs critical mass of the initial cloud. When a cloud of radius Rc ~1 pc - 1.99 pc collapsed to Rcore ~0.0001 pc to 0.00109 pc with indicated temperatures in the plot and
. The plot is obtained from Equation (15).
![]()
Figure 3. Radius of the newly formed core vs critical mass of the initial cloud. When the initial cloud radius Rc ~ runs from 1 pc - 1.99 pc collapsed to Rcore indicated in the plot, with running temperature
and
for increasing. The plot is obtained from Equation (15).
![]()
Figure 4. Cloud’s critical mass vs the ratio of its luminosities. When the initial cloud radius Rc ~ runs from 1 pc - 1.99 pc collapsed to Rcore indicated in the plot. When we see curves in this figure thermodynamic efficiency factor plays grate role in describing critical mass.
3.2. The Core Accretion Rate
It is the rate at which the central object (central core) gains mass from the initially collapsing cloud. This mass infall rate depends on the properties of the minimum mass of the cloud required for collapse. When the cloud is collapsing the mass is falling onto the central core. This process depends on time and properties of the cloud. Thus keeping
constant and considering spherical accretion. Since for a roughly spherical gas cloud with a mass close to the Jeans mass we can estimate the average accretion rate by taking the derivative of the critical mass with respect to time as:
(20)
Hence
, then Equation (20) in
can be expressed as
Simplifying and using all conversion parameters the mass infall rate for the core radius dominating cases is
(21)
Of course temperature cannot remain constant throughout the collapse process. In this case, we have a much more means to find the accretion rate; so that to simplify the changing temperature in time we describe as
, where
is approximated to
. Where
and
is the radial infall velocity of matter in the core and parent cloud respectively. Thereafter we Let
and have
(22)
simplifying this
(23)
where
is made constant for simplicity by making
constant, otherwise changing. Equations (20) to (23) are when radius of the core plays very great role in describing the collapsing cloud mass. Moreover, this expression can also be simplified, in the case that the collapsing cloud is more sensitive to the initial cloud
radius. Thus from Equation (16b) we have
. Assuming
as constant in the general sense we have
(24)
So we have two equations of core accretion from Equations (23) & (24) collectively written as
(25)
We apply Equation (25a) if the effect of the core radius is more dominating than that of the parent MC and one can use Equation (25b) for the dominant case of the parent cloud radius. In this chapter we focus on the core dominating case.
3.3. Numerical Calculation of Mass Infall Rate
We assume
is different from
and the life of the initial cloud and the core also different then we set
and
for the parent cloud and the core respectively. In this particular condition
runs from 107 - 108.04 yr,
runs from 105 - 107 yr, thus
, and
. Moreover, assuming isothermal collapse and keeping
and
. The initial cloud having radius
collapsed in time to the core with reducing radius from 0.00001 pc - 0.0000001 pc we plotted the figure below.
Figure 5 shows the accretion rate of the central core is governed by the rate of collapse of the initial cloud, the change of the central core radius in time, free-fall time and the size of the core. As the free-fall time of the cloud increases the rate of mass in fall reduces in time. This implies that matter in the reservoir gets depleted as free-fall time becomes so long. In general the figure indicates the
![]()
Figure 5. Numerically calculated core accretion rate with respect to different parameters. The plot is obtained from Equation (20). In general the curves of this figure show us how the radial flow supports the growth of acceptor. The rate of mass falling onto the central object reduces as time goes.
mass infall rate is not only a matter of the physical properties of the cloud but also the life time.
4. Summary
Current star formation models are successful in explaining a wide variety of observed data, but remain incomplete. The star formation process in sgMC needs to be discussed within the context of the thermodynamic efficiency factor in addition to the initial properties (mass, density, radius, and temperature) of the parent cloud. From the results obtained and model, the following key conclusions could be drawn: There is no one and an all-time feasible method of calculating critical mass of star-forming MC; methods vary according to the dynamical process that involved in collapsing the cloud core. Identification of the properties of the star-forming environment is the priorities as a key precondition for determining the fundamental parameters in collapsing a cloud and forming the star. Thermodynamic efficiency factor of self-gravitating MC is an additional constraint in studying star formation in sgMC. Due to these reasons it cannot be ignored in describing the critical mass of the sgMC.
The rate of mass infall onto the central core has been modelled in two ways, one when the accretion rate is more affected by the radius of the central star forming core, and two if the core accretion rate is more sensitive to the parent cloud’s radius. In both cases we have shown how the amount of matter from the parent cloud or envelope falling onto the star forming core reduces in time. Since the cloud life time is lower than the cloud free-fall time there will be no supply of matter to the central core from the envelope. Therefore, both free-fall time and the parent cloud life time, and other dynamical parameters play the crucial role in describing core growth rate as well as star formation rate. The method somehow is adequate to address the gap in studying star formation.
Acknowledgements
We thank Ethiopian Space Science and Technology Institute (ESSTI), Entoto Observatory and Research Center (EORC), Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics for supporting this study. The International Science Programme (ISP)-Uppsala University and the East African Astrophysics Research Network (EAARN) are gratefully acknowledged for supporting this study. Our thanks also go to the anonymous reviewer. G.M. Kumssa, thanks Jimma University for supporting this study.