1,388 research outputs found
On the origin of the distribution of binary-star periods
Pre-main sequence and main-sequence binary systems are observed to have
periods, P, ranging from one day to 10^(10) days and eccentricities, e, ranging
from 0 to 1. We pose the problem if stellar-dynamical interactions in very
young and compact star clusters may broaden an initially narrow period
distribution to the observed width. N-body computations of extremely compact
clusters containing 100 and 1000 stars initially in equilibrium and in cold
collapse are preformed. In all cases the assumed initial period distribution is
uniform in the narrow range 4.5 < log10(P) < 5.5 (P in days) which straddles
the maximum in the observed period distribution of late-type Galactic-field
dwarf systems. None of the models lead to the necessary broadening of the
period distribution, despite our adopted extreme conditions that favour
binary--binary interactions. Stellar-dynamical interactions in embedded
clusters thus cannot, under any circumstances, widen the period distribution
sufficiently. The wide range of orbital periods of very young and old binary
systems is therefore a result of cloud fragmentation and immediate subsequent
magneto-hydrodynamical processes operating within the multiple proto-stellar
system.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, ApJ, in pres
The Theoretical Mass--Magnitude Relation of Low-Mass Stars and its Metallicity Dependence
We investigate the dependence of theoretically generated mass - (absolute
magnitude) relations on stellar models. Using up to date physics we compute
models in the mass range 0.1 < m < 1M_sun. We compare the solar-metallicity
models with our older models, with recent models computed by others, and also
with an empirical mass - (absolute magnitude) relation that best fits the
observed data. At a given mass below 0.6M_sun the effective temperatures differ
substantially from model to model. However taken individually each set of
models is in good agreement with observations in the mass - luminosity plane. A
minimum in the derivative dm/dM_V at M_V = 11.5, which is due to H_2 formation
and establishment of a fully convective stellar interior, is present in all
photometric bands, for all models. This minimum leads to a maximum in the
stellar luminosity function for Galactic disk stars at M_V = 11.5, M_bol = 9.8.
Stellar models should locate this maximum in the stellar luminosity function at
the same magnitude as observations. Models which incorporate the most realistic
theoretical atmospheres and the most recent equation of state and opacities can
satisfy this constraint. These models are also in best agreement with the most
recent luminosity - (effective temperature) and mass-luminosity data. Each set
of our models of a given metallicity (with 0.2 > [Fe/H] > -2.3) shows a maximum
in -dm/dM_bol, which moves to brighter bolometric magnitudes with decreasing
metallicity. The change in location of the maximum, as a function of [Fe/H],
follows the location of structure in luminosity functions for stellar
populations with different metal abundances. This structure seen in all
observed stellar populations can be accounted for by the mass--luminosity
relation.Comment: MNRAS (in press), 15 pages, 1 appendix, plain TeX, 9 postscript
figure
Escaping stars from young low-N clusters
With the use of N-body calculations the amount and properties of escaping
stars from low-N (N = 100 and 1000) young embedded star clusters prior to gas
expulsion are studied over the first 5 Myr of their existence. Besides the
number of stars also different initial radii and binary populations are
examined as well as virialised and collapsing clusters. It is found that these
clusters can loose substantial amounts (up to 20%) of stars within 5 Myr with
considerable velocities up to more than 100 km/s. Even with their mean
velocities between 2 and 8 km/s these stars will still be travelling between 2
and 30 pc during the 5 Myr. Therefore can large amounts of distributed stars in
star-forming regions not necessarily be counted as evidence for the isolated
formation of stars.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication by MNRA
A discontinuity in the low-mass initial mass function
The origin of brown dwarfs (BDs) is still an unsolved mystery. While the
standard model describes the formation of BDs and stars in a similar way recent
data on the multiplicity properties of stars and BDs show them to have
different binary distribution functions. Here we show that proper treatment of
these uncovers a discontinuity of the multiplicity-corrected mass distribution
in the very-low-mass star (VLMS) and BD mass regime. A continuous IMF can be
discarded with extremely high confidence. This suggests that VLMSs and BDs on
the one hand, and stars on the other, are two correlated but disjoint
populations with different dynamical histories. The analysis presented here
suggests that about one BD forms per five stars and that the BD-star binary
fraction is about 2%-3% among stellar systems.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, uses emulateapj.cls. Minor corrections and 1
reference added after being accepted by the Ap
Core dissolution and the dynamics of massive stars in young stellar clusters
We investigate the dynamical effects of rapid gas expulsion from the core of
a young stellar cluster. The aims of this study are to determine 1) whether a
mass-segregated core survives the gas expulsion and 2) the probable location of
any massive stars that have escaped from the core. Feedback from massive stars
is expected to remove the gas from the core of the cluster first, as that is
where most massive stars are located. We find that gas expulsion has little
effect on the core for a core star formation efficiency, of greater than 50%.
For lower values of star formation efficiency down to 20%, a reduced core
survives containing the majority of the massive stars while some of them are
dispersed into the rest of the cluster. In fact we find that ejected stars
migrate from radial to tangential orbits due to stellar encounters once they
leave the core. Thus, the location of massive stars outside of the core does
not exclude their forming in the dense cluster core. Few massive stars are
expected to remain in the core for a star formation efficiency lower than 20%.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Formation of Star Clusters II: 3D Simulations of Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence in Molecular Clouds
(Abridged) We present a series of decaying turbulence simulations that
represent a cluster-forming clump within a molecular cloud, investigating the
role of magnetic fields on the formation of potential star-forming cores. We
present an exhaustive analysis of numerical data from these simulations that
includes a compilation of all of the distributions of physical properties that
characterize bound cores - including their masses, radii, mean densities,
angular momenta, spins, magnetizations, and mass-to-flux ratios. We also
present line maps of our models that can be compared with observations. Our
simulations range between 5-30 Jeans masses of gas, and are representative of
molecular cloud clumps with masses between 100-1000 solar masses. The cores
have mass-to-flux ratios that are generally less than that of the original
cloud, and so a cloud that is initially highly supercritical can produce cores
that are slightly supercritical, similar to that seen by Zeeman measurements of
molecular cloud cores. Clouds that are initially only slightly supercritical
will instead collapse along the field lines into sheets, and the cores that
form as these sheets fragment have a different mass spectrum than what is
observed. The spin rates of these cores suggests that subsequent fragmentation
into multiple systems is likely. The sizes of the bound cores that are produced
are typically 0.02-0.2 pc and have densities in the range 10^4-10^5 cm^{-3} in
agreement with observational surveys. Finally, our numerical data allow us to
test theoretical models of the mass spectrum of cores, such as the turbulent
fragmentation picture of Padoan-Nordlund. We find that while this model gets
the shape of the core mass spectrum reasonably well, it fails to predict the
peak mass in the core mass spectrum.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 28 pages, 16 figures. Substantial revision since
last versio
On the Evolutionary History of Stars and their Fossil Mass and Light
The total extragalactic background radiation can be an important test of the
global star formation history (SFH). Using direct observational estimates of
the SFH, along with standard assumptions about the initial mass function (IMF),
we calculate the total extragalactic background radiation and the observed
stellar density today. We show that plausible SFHs allow a significant range in
each quantity, but that their ratio is very tightly constrained. Current
estimates of the stellar mass and extragalactic background are difficult to
reconcile, as long as the IMF is fixed to the Salpeter slope above 1 Msun. The
joint confidence interval of these two quantities only agrees with that
determined from the allowed range of SFH fits at the 3-sigma level, and for our
best-fit values the discrepancy is about a factor of two. Alternative energy
sources that contribute to the background, such as active galactic nuclei
(AGN), Population III stars, or decaying particles, appear unlikely to resolve
the discrepancy. However, changes to the IMF allow plausible solutions to the
background problem. The simplest is an average IMF with an increased
contribution from stars around 1.5--4 Msun. A ``paunchy'' IMF of this sort
could emerge as a global average if low mass star formation is suppressed in
galaxies experiencing rapid starbursts. Such an IMF is consistent with
observations of star-forming regions, and would help to reconcile the fossil
record of star formation with the directly observed SFH.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables; submitted to Monthly Notice
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