E. Vazquezsemadeni et al., A SEARCH FOR LARSON-TYPE RELATIONS IN NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS OF THE ISM - EVIDENCE FOR NONCONSTANT COLUMN DENSITIES, The Astrophysical journal, 474(1), 1997, pp. 292-307
We present results from a statistical study of clouds in two-dimension
al numerical simulations of the interstellar medium. The clouds in the
simulations exhibit a differential mass spectrum dN(M)/dM similar to
M(-1.44+/-0.1) and a velocity dispersion-size relation Delta nu simila
r to R(0.41+/-0.08). However, the clouds do not exhibit a clear densit
y-size relation. At a given mean density, clouds span a range of sizes
from the smallest resolved scales up to a maximum given by a Larson-t
ype relation R(max) similar to p(alpha), with alpha = -0.81 +/- 0.15,
although numerical effects cannot be ruled out as being responsible fo
r the latter correlation. The clouds additionally span a range of colu
mn densities N of 2 orders of magnitude, supporting the suggestion tha
t the observational density-size relation may be an artifact of survey
limitations. In this case, the Delta nu-R relation can be interpreted
as a direct consequence of a k(-2) turbulent spectrum rather than of
virial equilibrium of clouds that satisfy a p proportional to R(-1) la
w. The k(-2) spectrum is verified in the simulations and is characteri
stic of a field of shocks. However, we also discuss the possibility th
at the clouds are in balance between self-gravity and turbulence but w
ith a scatter of at least a factor of 10 in the Delta nu-R relation, a
nd of 100 in the density-size relation, according to the equilibrium r
elation Delta nu similar to (NR)(1/2). In addition, we compare these r
esults with recent observational data. We propose a simple model sugge
sting that recent results that find nearly constant column densities f
or dark IRAS clouds may be an artifact of a temperature gradient withi
n the clouds induced by external radiative heating. As a consequence,
we emphasize that IRAS surface brightness maps are not appropriate for
measuring column densities.