1,447 research outputs found

    On the mass function of star clusters

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    Clusters that form in total 10^3 < N < 10^5 stars (type II clusters) lose their gas within a dynamical time as a result of the photo-ionising flux from O stars. Sparser (type I) clusters get rid of their residual gas on a timescale longer or comparable to the nominal crossing time and thus evolve approximately adiabatically. This is also true for massive embedded clusters (type III) for which the velocity dispersion is larger than the sound speed of the ionised gas. On expelling their residual gas, type I and III clusters are therefore expected to lose a smaller fraction of their stellar component than type II clusters. We outline the effect this has on the transformation of the mass function of embedded clusters (ECMF), which is directly related to the mass function of star-cluster-forming molecular cloud cores, to the ``initial'' MF of bound gas-free star clusters (ICMF). The resulting ICMF has, for a featureless power-law ECMF, a turnover near 10^{4.5} Msun and a peak near 10^3 Msun. The peak lies around the initial masses of the Hyades, Praesepe and Pleiades clusters. We also find that the entire Galactic population II stellar spheroid can be generated if star formation proceeded via embedded clusters distributed like a power-law MF with exponent 0.9 < beta < 2.6.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, accepted by MNRAS, small adjustments for consistency with published versio

    On the origin of the distribution of binary-star periods

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    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

    A discontinuity in the low-mass initial mass function

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    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

    Nuclear embedded star clusters in NGC 7582

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    We report on the discovery of several compact regions of mid-infrared emission in the starforming circum nuclear disk of the starburst/Seyfert2 galaxy NGC7582. The compact sources do not have counterparts in the optical and near-infrared, suggesting that they are deeply embedded in dust. We use the [NeII]12.8 micron line emission to estimate the emission measure of the ionized gas, which in turn is used to assess the number of ionizing photons. Two of the brighter sources are found to have ionizing fluxes of ~2.5x10^52, whereas the fainter ones have ~1x10^52 photons/s. Comparing with a one Myr old starburst, we derive stellar masses in the range (3-5)x10^5 Msun, and find that the number of O-stars in each compact source is typically (0.6-1.6)x10^3. We conclude that the compact mid-infrared sources are likely to be young, embedded star clusters, of which only a few are known so far. Our observation highlights the need for high resolution mid-infrared imaging to discover and study embedded star clusters in the proximity of active galactic nuclei.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter

    Modelling of Supercapacitors: Factors Influencing Performance

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    The utilizable capacitance of Electrochemical Double Layer Capacitors (EDLCs) is a function of the frequency at which they are operated and this is strongly dependent on the construction and physical parameters of the device. We simulate the dynamic behavior of an EDLC using a spatially resolved model based on the porous electrode theory. The model of Verbrugge and Liu (J. Electrochem. Soc. 152, D79 (2005)) was extended with a dimension describing the transport into the carbon particle pores. Our results show a large influence of the electrode thickness (Le), separator thickness (Ls) and electrolyte conductivity (κ) on the performance of EDLCs. In agreement with experimental data, the time constant was an increasing function of Le and Ls and a decreasing function of κ. The main limitation was found to be on the scale of the whole cell, while transport into the particles became a limiting factor only if the particle size was unrealistically large. The results were generalized into a simplified relation allowing for a quick evaluation of performance for the design of new devices. This work provides an insight into the performance limitation of EDLCs and identifies the critical parameters to consider for both systems engineers and material scientists

    Do binaries in clusters form in the same way as in the field?

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    We examine the dynamical destruction of binary systems in star clusters of different densities. We find that at high densities (10^4 - 10^5 Msun pc^-3) almost all binaries with separations > 10^3 AU are destroyed after a few crossing times. At low densities (order(10^2) Msun pc^-3) many binaries with separations > 10^3 AU are destroyed, and no binaries with separations > 10^4 AU survive after a few crossing times. Therefore the binary separations in clusters can be used as a tracer of the dynamical age and past density of a cluster. We argue that the central region of the Orion Nebula Cluster was around 100 times denser in the past with a half-mass radius of only 0.1 - 0.2 pc as (a) it is expanding, (b) it has very few binaries with separations > 10^3 AU, and (c) it is well-mixed and therefore dynamically old. We also examine the origin of the field binary population. Binaries with separations < 10^2 AU are not significantly modified in any cluster, therefore at these separations the field reflects the sum of all star formation. Binaries with separations in the range 10^2 - 10^4 AU are progressively more and more heavily affected by dynamical disruption in increasingly dense clusters. If most star formation is clustered, these binaries must be over-produced relative to the field. Finally, no binary with a separation > 10^4 AU can survive in any cluster and so must be produced by isolated star formation, but only if all isolated star formation produces extremely wide binaries.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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