A fractal origin for the mass spectrum of interstellar clouds
Abstract
Interstellar molecular clouds have power-law size L and mass M distributions of the form n(L)dL = L-αL dL and n(M)dM = M-αM dM, where M ∝Lκ is also a power law. These relations are shown to result from the fractal and scale-free nature of interstellar gas with power indices that are independent of distance. The results are αL = 1 + D and αM = 1 + D/κ for interstellar fractal dimension D = 2.3 ± 0.3 and a value of κ in the range 2.4-3.7, as determined from cloud surveys in the literature. The same fractal dimension also results from the expected relation D = κ when the M(L) correlation includes many different surveys, spanning a range of 1010 in mass. These results imply that interstellar CO clouds are the unresolved parts of a pervasive fractal structure in the interstellar gas. The similarity between n(M) for interstellar clouds and n(M) for globular clusters suggests that the clusters formed inside fractal progenitor clouds at a nearly constant efficiency. © 1996. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.