31 January 2013
31 January 2013
Speaker: Phil Hopkins (UC Berkeley)
Title:Bok Prize Lecture: A New Approach to Turbulence: The Origins of ISM Structure, Stellar Clustering and the IMF, and (perhaps?) Planet Formation
Abstract:The ISM is a chaotic, highly nonlinear system in which
super-sonic turbulence, gravity, accretion, and "feedback" play
critical roles. Yet there is remarkable regularity in certain
properties. I'll discuss how many observed properties of the ISM
can be understood as a fundamental consequence of super-sonic
turbulence in a rapidly cooling, self-gravitating medium. In doing
so, I'll show how analytic methods used in cosmology to describe
the formation of large-scale structure can be applied to
understand the origins of structure in the ISM, including the mass
function and structural properties of giant molecular clouds, the
stellar initial mass function, the clustering of star formation,
and the formation of planets via "direct collapse" (gravitational
instability). This can be used to study time-dependent evolution
of structure even in highly non-linear systems, allowing us to
understand many emergent properties of simulations with turbulence
and gravity. I'll briefly discuss the role of "feedback" from
stars, in the forms of radiation pressure, photoionization, and
supernovae, which regulates the thermal and turbulent state of the
gas.
Video of the Presentation
(Talks can be viewed with RealPlayer. Free download
is available from
www.real.com
)
|