# WRONG
$command = "a.xml b.xml c.xml"; junit-merge $command
results in command line junit-merge "a.xml b.xml c.xml"[1], i.e. it passes a string with verbatim value a.xml b.xml c.xml as a single argument to junit-merge, which is not the intent.
PowerShell does not act like POSIX-like shells such as bash do in this regard: In bash, the value of variable $command - due to being referenced unquoted - would be subject to word splitting (one of the so-called shell expansions) and would indeed result in 3 distinct arguments (though even there an array-based invocation would be preferable).
PowerShell supports no bash-like shell expansions[2]; it has different, generally more flexible constructs, such as the splatting technique discussed below.
Instead, define your arguments as individual elements of an array, as justnotme advises:
# Define the *array* of *individual* arguments.
$command = "a.xml", "b.xml", "c.xml"
# Pass the array to junit-merge, which causes PowerShell
# to pass its elements as *individual arguments*; it is the equivalent of:
#     junit-merge  a.xml  b.xml  c.xml
junit-merge $command
This is an application of a PowerShell technique called splatting, where you specify arguments to pass to a command via a variable:
- Either (typically only used for external programs, as in your case): - 
- As an array of arguments to pass individually as positional arguments, as shown above. In this case, even an array literal would work.
 
- Or (more typically when calling PowerShell commands): - 
- As a hashtable to pass named parameter values, in which case you must replace the - $sigil in the variable reference with- @; e.g., in your case- @command; e.g., the following is the equivalent of calling- Get-ChildItem C:\ -Directory:
 
- $paramVals = @{ LiteralPath = 'C:\'; Directory = $true }; Get-ChildItem @paramVals
 
 
Caveat re array-based splatting:
Due to a bug detailed in GitHub issue #6280, PowerShell doesn't pass empty arguments through to external programs (applies to all Windows PowerShell versions / up to PowerShell (Core) 7.2.x. This has been fixed in 7.3, with selective exceptions on Windows, in conjunction with fixing how arguments with embedded " are passed - see the $PSNativeCommandArgumentPassing preference variable.
E.g., up to PowerShell v7.2.x, foo.exe "" unexpectedly results in just foo.exe being called.
This problem equally affects array-based splatting, so that 
$cmdArgs = "", "other"; foo.exe $cmdArgs results in foo.exe other rather than the expected foo.exe "" other.
The workaround (which also applies in v7.3+ if $PSNativeCommandArgumentPassing = 'Legacy' is set) is to use '""' (sic).
Optional use of @ in array-based splatting with external programs:
As noted, with external programs use of @ in lieu of $ isn't necessary, because passing an array implicitly results in splatting.
(By contrast, when calling a PowerShell command to which you want to pass the elements of an array as individual, positional arguments, you must use @)
However, you may choose to use @ with external programs too, and arguably it conveys the splatting intent more clearly:
junit-merge @command
There is a subtle behavioral distinction, however - though it will probably rarely if ever surface in practice:
The safer choice is to use $, because it guards against (the however hypothetical) accidental misinterpretation of a array element containing --% that you intend to be passed on as-is.
Only the @ syntax recognizes an array element with verbatim value --% as the special stop-parsing token, --%
Said token tells PowerShell not to parse the remaining arguments as it normally would and instead pass them through as-is - unexpanded, except for expanding cmd.exe-style variable references such as %USERNAME%.
This is normally only useful when not using splatting, typically in the context of being able to use command lines that were written for cmd.exe from PowerShell as-is, without having to account for PowerShell's syntactical differences.
In the context of splatting, however, the behavior resulting from --% is non-obvious and best avoided:
- As in direct argument passing, the - --%is removed from the resulting command line.
 
- Argument boundaries are lost, so that a single array element - foo bar, which normally gets placed as- "foo bar"on the command line, is placed as- foo bar, i.e. effectively as 2 arguments.
 
[1] Your call implies the intent to pass the value of variable $command as a single argument, so when PowerShell builds the command line behind the scenes, it double-quotes the verbatim a.xml b.xml c.xml string contained in $command to ensure that. Note that these double quotes are unrelated to how you originally assigned a value to $command.
Unfortunately, this automatic quoting is broken for values with embedded " chars. - see this answer, for instance.
[2] As a nod to POSIX-like shells, PowerShell does perform one kind of shell expansion, but (a) only on Unix-like platforms (macOS, Linux) and (b) only when calling external programs: Unquoted wildcard patterns such as *.txt are indeed expanded to their matching filenames when you call an external program (e.g., /bin/echo *.txt), which is feature that PowerShell calls native globbing.