83 research outputs found
Magneto-thermal condensation modes including the effects of charged dust particles
We study thermal instability in a magnetized and partially ionized plasma
with charged dust particles. Our linear analysis shows that the growth rate of
the unstable modes in the presence of dust particles strongly depends on the
ratio of the cooling rate and the modified dust-cyclotron frequency. If the
cooling rate is less than the modified dust-cyclotron frequency, then growth
rate of the condensation modes does not modify due to the existence of the
charged dust particles. But when the cooling rate is greater than (or
comparable to) the modified dust-cyclotron frequency, the growth rate of
unstable modes increases because of the dust particles. Also, wavenumber of the
perturbations corresponding to the maximum growth rate shifts to the smaller
values (larger wavelengths) as the cooling rate becomes larger than the
modified dust-cyclotron frequency. We show that growth rate of the condensation
modes increases with the electrical charge of the dust particles.Comment: accepted by MNRA
Massive stars reveal variations of the stellar initial mass function in the Milky Way stellar clusters
We investigate whether the stellar initial mass function (IMF) is universal,
or whether it varies significantly among young stellar clusters in the Milky
Way. We propose a method to uncover the range of variation of the parameters
that describe the shape of the IMF for the population of young Galactic
clusters. These parameters are the slopes in the low and high stellar mass
regimes, and , respectively, and the characteristic mass,
. The method relies exclusively on the high mass content of the
clusters, but is able to yield information on the distributions of parameters
that describe the IMF over the entire stellar mass range. This is achieved by
comparing the fractions of single and lonely massive O stars in a recent
catalog of the Milky Way clusters with a library of simulated clusters built
with various distribution functions of the IMF parameters. The synthetic
clusters are corrected for the effects of the binary population, stellar
evolution, sample incompleteness, and ejected O stars. Our findings indicate
that broad distributions of the IMF parameters are required in order to
reproduce the fractions of single and lonely O stars in Galactic clusters. They
also do not lend support to the existence of a cluster mass-maximum stellar
mass relation. We propose a probabilistic formulation of the IMF whereby the
parameters of the IMF are described by Gaussian distribution functions centered
around , , and M, and with
dispersions of , , and
M around these values.Comment: Accepted to MNRAS, 17 pages, 13 figures. Larger observational sample.
Conclusions strengthene
The galaxy-wide stellar initial mass function in the presence of cluster-to-cluster IMF variations
We calculate the integrated galactic initial stellar mass function (IGIMF) in
the presence of IMF variations in clusters. IMF Variations for a population of
clusters are taken into account in the form of Gaussian distributions of the
IMF parameters. For the tapered power law function used here, these are the
slopes at the high and low mass ends, and , and the
characteristic mass . Variations are modeled by varying the width of
the Gaussian distributions. The reference values are the standard deviations of
the parameters observed for young clusters in the present-day Milky Way
, , and
M. Increasing the dispersions of and moderately
flattens the IGIMF at the low and high mass ends. Increasing
shifts the peak of the IGIMF to lower masses, rendering the IGIMF more bottom
heavy. This can explain the bottom heavy stellar mass function of Early-type
galaxies as they are the result of the merger of disk galaxies where the
physical conditions of the star forming gas vary significantly both in time and
space. The effect of IMF variations is compared to that due to other effects
such as variations in the shape of the initial cluster mass function,
metallicity, and galactic SFR. We find that the effect of IMF variations is a
dominant factor that always affects the characteristic mass of the IGIMF. We
compare our results to a sample of ultra-faint dwarf satellite galaxies (UFDs).
Their present-day stellar mass function is an analog to their IGIMF at the time
their stellar populations have formed. We show that the slope of the IGIMF of
the UFDs can only be reproduced when IMF variations of the same order as those
measured in the present-day Milky Way are included. (Abridged)Comment: Submitte
Feedback Regulated Star Formation: From Star Clusters to Galaxies
This paper summarises results from semi-analytical modelling of star
formation in protocluster clumps of different metallicities. In this model,
gravitationally bound cores form uniformly in the clump following a prescribed
core formation efficiency per unit time. After a contraction timescale which is
equal to a few times their free-fall times, the cores collapse into stars and
populate the IMF. Feedback from the newly formed OB stars is taken into account
in the form of stellar winds. When the ratio of the effective wind energy of
the winds to the gravitational energy of the system reaches unity, gas is
removed from the clump and core and star formation are quenched. The power of
the radiation driven winds has a strong dependence on metallicity and increases
with increasing metallicity. Thus, winds from stars in the high metallicity
models lead to a rapid evacuation of the gas from the protocluster clump and to
a reduced star formation efficiency, SFE_{exp}, as compared to their low
metallicity counterparts. By combining SFE_{exp} with the timescales on which
gas expulsion occurs, we derive the metallicity dependent star formation rate
per unit time in this model as a function of the gas surface density Sigma_{g}.
This is combined with the molecular gas fraction in order to derive the
dependence of the surface density of star formation Sigma_{SFR} on Sigma_{g}.
This feedback regulated model of star formation reproduces very well the
observed star formation laws extending from low gas surface densities up to the
starburst regime. Furthermore, the results show a dependence of Sigma_{SFR} on
metallicity over the entire range of gas surface densities, and can also
explain part of the scatter in the observations.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, proceedings of "Stellar Clusters and
Associations- A RIA workshop on GAIA", 23-27 May 2011, Granada, Spai
Variation of the high-mass slope of the stellar initial mass function: Theory meets observations
We present observational evidence of the correlation between the high-mass
slope of the stellar initial mass function (IMF) in young star clusters and
their stellar surface density, . When the high-mass end of the IMF
is described by a power law of the form , the value of is seen to weakly decrease with
increasing , following a
relation. We also present a model that can explain these observations. The
model is based on the idea that the coalescence of protostellar cores in a
protocluster forming clump is more efficient in high density environments where
cores are more closely packed. The efficiency of the coalescence process is
calculated as a function of the parental clump properties and in particular the
relation between its mass and radius as well as its core formation efficiency.
The main result of this model is that the increased efficiency of the
coalescence process leads to shallower slopes of the IMF in agreement with the
observations of young clusters, and the observations are best reproduced with
compact protocluster forming clumps. These results have significant
implications for the shape of the IMF in different Galactic and extragalactic
environments and have very important consequences for galactic evolution.Comment: Submitted. Feedback is welcom
Feedback regulated star formation: II. dual constraints on the SFE and the age spread of stars in massive clusters
We show that the termination of the star formation process by winds from
massive stars in protocluster forming clumps imposes dual constraints on the
star formation efficiencies (SFEs) and stellar age spreads ()
in stellar clusters. We have considered two main classes of clump models. One
class of models in one in which the core formation efficiency (CFE) per unit
time and as a consequence the star formation rate (SFR) is constant in time and
another class of models in which the CFE per unit time, and as a consequence
the SFR, increases with time. Models with an increasing mode of star formation
yield shorter age spreads (a few 0.1 Myrs) and typically higher SFEs than
models in which star formation is uniform in time. We find that the former
models reproduce remarkably well the SFE values of starburst
clusters such as NGC 3603 YC and Westerlund 1, while the latter describe better
the star formation process in lower density environments such as in the Orion
Nebula Cluster. We also show that the SFE and of massive
clusters are expected to be higher in low metallicity environments. This could
be tested with future large extragalactic surveys of stellar clusters. We
advocate that placing a stellar cluster on the SFE- diagram is
a powerful method to distinguish between different stellar clusters formation
scenarios such as between generic gravitational instability of a gas
cloud/clump or as the result of cloud-cloud collisions. It is also a very
useful tool for testing star formation theories and numerical models versus the
observations.Comment: Accepted to MNRA
Properties of an accretion disc with a power-law stress-pressure relationship
Recent numerical simulations of magnetized accretion discs show that the
radial-azimuthal component of the stress tensor due to the magnetorotational
instability (MRI) is well represented by a power-law function of the gas
pressure rather than a linear relation which has been used in most of the
accretion disc studies. The exponent of this power-law function which depends
on the net flux of the imposed magnetic field is reported in the range between
zero and unity. However, the physical consequences of this power-law
stress-pressure relation within the framework of the standard disc model have
not been explored so far. In this study, the structure of an accretion disc
with a power-law stress-pressure relation is studied using analytical solutions
in the steady-state and time-dependent cases. The derived solutions are
applicable to different accreting systems, and as an illustrative example, we
explore structure of protoplanetary discs using these solutions. We show that
the slopes of the radial surface density and temperature distributions become
steeper with decreasing the stress exponent. However, if the disc opacity is
dominated by icy grains and value of the stress exponent is less than about
, the surface density and temperature profiles become so steep that make
them unreliable. We also obtain analytical solutions for the protoplanetary
discs which are irradiated by the host star. Using these solutions, we find
that the effect of the irradiation becomes more significant with decreasing the
stress exponent.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
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