{ "id": "1509.05910", "version": "v1", "published": "2015-09-19T16:32:09.000Z", "updated": "2015-09-19T16:32:09.000Z", "title": "Collapse in Self-gravitating Turbulent Fluids", "authors": [ "Daniel W. Murray", "Philip Chang", "Norman W. Murray", "John Pittman" ], "comment": "21 pages, 20 figures, submitted to ApJ, fixed figure 14a", "categories": [ "astro-ph.GA", "astro-ph.SR" ], "abstract": "We perform simulations of star formation in self-gravitating turbulently driven gas. We find that star formation is not a self-similar process; two length scales enter, the radius of the rotationally supported disk $r_d$, and the radius $r_*$ of the sphere of influence of the nascent star, where the enclosed gas mass exceeds the stellar mass. The character of the flow changes at these two scales. We do not see any examples of inside-out collapse. Rather, the accretion of mass starts at large scales where we see large infall velocities $|u_r(r)| \\approx (1/3) v_{ff} \\sim (1/3)\\sqrt{GM(r)/r}\\gtrsim c_s$ out to $r \\sim 1 \\, \\rm{pc}$ hundreds of thousands of years before a star forms. The density evolves to a fixed attractor, $\\rho(r,t ) \\rightarrow \\rho(r)$, for $r_dr_d$ and rotational support becomes important for $r