De. Mclaughlin et Re. Pudritz, GRAVITATIONAL COLLAPSE AND STAR-FORMATION IN LOGOTROPIC AND NONISOTHERMAL SPHERES, The Astrophysical journal, 476(2), 1997, pp. 750-765
We present semianalytical similarity solutions for the inside out, exp
ansion-wave collapse of initially virialized gas clouds with nonisothe
rmal equations of state. Results are given for the family of negative-
index polytropes (P proportional to rho(gamma), gamma less than or equ
al to 1), but we focus especially on the so-called logotrope, P/P-c =
1 + Aln (rho/rho(c)). In a separate paper, we have shown this to be th
e best available phenomenological description of the internal structur
e and average properties of molecular clouds, as well as dense clumps
of both high and low mass. The formalism and interpretation of the pre
sent theory are extensions of those in Shu's standard model for accret
ion in self-gravitating isothermal spheres: a collapse front moves out
ward into a cloud at rest, and the gas behind it falls back to a colla
psed core, or protostar. The infalling material eventually enters free
-fall, so that the density profiles and velocity fields have the same
shape (rho proportional to r(-3/2) and -u proportional to r(-1/2)) at
both small radii in logotropic and isothermal spheres. However, severa
l differences arise from the introduction of a new equation of state.
The accretion rate onto a protostar is not constant in a logotrope, bu
t grows as M proportional to t(3) during the expansion wave. Thus, the
formation time for a star of mass M scales as M(1/4); low-mass stars
are accreted over longer times, and high-mass stars over shorter times
, than expected in isothermal clouds. This result has implications for
the form and origin of the stellar initial mass function. In addition
, the gas density behind an expansion wave increases with time in our
theory, but it would decrease in an isothermal sphere. The infall velo
cities also grow, but at an initially much slower rate than that found
in an isothermal collapse. These results apply to low- and high-mass
star formation alike. We briefly discuss how they lead to older inferr
ed collapse ages for Class 0 protostars in general and for the Bok glo
bule B335 in particular.