42 research outputs found
How can young massive clusters reach their present-day sizes?
The classic question that how young massive star clusters attain their shapes
and sizes, as we find them today, remains to be a challenge. Both observational
and computational studies of star-forming massive molecular gas clouds infer
that massive cluster formation is primarily triggered along the small-scale
( pc) filamentary substructures within the clouds. The present
study is intended to investigate the possible ways in which a
filament-like-compact, massive star cluster (effective radius 0.1-0.3 pc) can
expand times, still remaining massive enough (), to become a young massive star cluster, as we observe today. To that
end, model massive clusters (of initially ) are
evolved using Sverre Aarseth's state-of-the-art N-body code NBODY7. All the
computed clusters expand with time, whose sizes (effective radii) are compared
with those observed for young massive clusters, of age Myr, in
the Milky Way and other nearby galaxies. It is found that beginning from the
above compact sizes, a star cluster cannot expand by its own, i.e., due to
two-body relaxation, stellar-evolutionary mass loss, dynamical heating by
primordial binaries and stellar-mass black holes, up to the observed sizes of
young massive clusters; they always remain much more compact compared to the
observed ones. This calls for additional mechanisms that can boost the
expansion of a massive cluster after its assembly. Using further N-body
calculations, it is shown that a substantial residual gas expulsion, with
% star formation efficiency, can indeed swell the newborn embedded
cluster adequately. The limitations of the present calculations and their
consequences are discussed.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures (2 in colour), 4 tables. Accepted for publication
in Astronomy and Astrophysic