The masses of open star clusters and their tidal tails and the stellar initial mass function

被引:0
|
作者
Wirth, Henriette [1 ]
Dinnbier, Frantisek [1 ]
Kroupa, Pavel [1 ,2 ]
Subr, Ladislav [1 ]
机构
[1] Charles Univ Prague, Astron Inst, Fac Math & Phys, V Holesovickach 2, Prague 18000, Czech Republic
[2] Univ Bonn, Helmholtz Inst Strahlen & Kernphys, Nussallee 14-16, D-53115 Bonn, Germany
关键词
methods: numerical; binaries: general; galaxies: star clusters: general; DYNAMICAL POPULATION SYNTHESIS; GAS EXPULSION; BINARY STARS; VELOCITY DISPERSIONS; LUMINOSITY-RELATION; SOLAR NEIGHBORHOOD; GLOBULAR-CLUSTERS; UPPER LIMIT; EVOLUTION; GALAXY;
D O I
10.1051/0004-6361/202347839
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
Context. Unresolved binaries have a strong influence on the observed parameters of stellar clusters (SCs). Aims. We quantify this influence and compute the resulting mass underestimates and stellar mass function (MF). Methods. N-body simulations of realistic SCs were used to investigate the evolution of the binary population in a SC and its tidal tails. Together with an empirically gauged stellar mass-luminosity relation, the results were then used to determine how the presence of binaries changes the photometric mass and MF of the SC and its tails as deduced from observations. Results. Tail 1 (T1), which is the tidal tail caused by gas expulsion, contains a larger fraction of binaries than both the SC and Tail 2 (T2), which forms after gas expulsion. Additionally, T1 has a larger velocity dispersion. Using the luminosity of an unresolved binary, an observer would underestimate its mass. This bias sensitively depends on the companion masses due to the structure of the stellar mass-luminosity relation. Combining the effect of all binaries in the simulation, the total photometric mass of the SC is underestimated by 15%. Dark objects (black holes and neutron stars) increase the difference between the real and observed mass of the SC further. For both the SC and the tails, the observed power-law index of the MF between a stellar mass of 0.3 and 0.7 M-circle dot is smaller by up to 0.2 than the real one, the real initial mass function (IMF) being steeper by this amount. This difference is larger for stars with a larger velocity dispersion or binary fraction. Conclusions. Since the stars formed in SCs are the progenitors of the Galactic field stars, this work suggests that the binary fractions of different populations of stars in the Galactic disc will differ as a function of the velocity dispersion. However, the direction of this correlation is currently unclear, and a complete population synthesis will be needed to investigate this effect. Variations in the binary fractions of different clusters can lead to perceived variations of the deduced stellar MFs.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Old massive clusters (and a nuclear star cluster?) in the tidal tails of NGC 5238
    Bellazzini, M.
    Annibali, F.
    Correnti, M.
    Gatto, M.
    Marinelli, M.
    Pascale, R.
    Sacchi, E.
    Tosi, M.
    Cignoni, M.
    Cannon, J. M.
    Schisgal, L.
    Bortolini, G.
    Aloisi, A.
    Beccari, G.
    Nipoti, C.
    ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2024, 690
  • [32] Dynamical masses of young star clusters: Constraints on the stellar IMF and star formation efficiency
    Bastian, Nate
    PATHWAYS THROUGH AN ECLECTIC UNIVERSE, 2008, 390 : 47 - 51
  • [33] Tidal tails of open star clusters as probes of early gas expulsion: I. A semi-analytic model
    Dinnbier, Frantisek
    Kroupa, Pavel
    ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2020, 640
  • [34] The mass function and dynamical mass of young star clusters: why their initial crossing-time matters crucially
    Parmentier, Genevieve
    Baumgardt, Holger
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2012, 427 (03) : 1940 - 1952
  • [35] STELLAR FEEDBACK IN MOLECULAR CLOUDS AND ITS INFLUENCE ON THE MASS FUNCTION OF YOUNG STAR CLUSTERS
    Fall, S. Michael
    Krumholz, Mark R.
    Matzner, Christopher D.
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS, 2010, 710 (02) : L142 - L146
  • [36] On the function describing the stellar initial mass function
    Maschberger, T.
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2013, 429 (02) : 1725 - 1733
  • [37] The Stellar Mass Function in Globular Clusters
    De Marchi, Guido
    IMPACT OF HST ON EUROPEAN ASTRONOMY, 2010, : 55 - 59
  • [38] Old star clusters: Bench tests of low mass stellar models
    Salaris, M.
    40TH LIEGE INTERNATIONAL ASTROPHYSICAL COLLOQUIUM AGEING LOW MASS STARS: FROM RED GIANTS TO WHITE DWARFS, 2013, 43
  • [39] Is the stellar initial mass function universal?
    Ferreras, Ignacio
    La Barbera, Francesco
    Vazdekis, Alexandre
    ASTRONOMY & GEOPHYSICS, 2016, 57 (02) : 32 - 36
  • [40] Origins of the Stellar Initial Mass Function
    Moore, Toby J. T.
    PROBING STELLAR POPULATIONS OUT TO THE DISTANT UNIVERSE, 2009, 1111 : 121 - 128