220 research outputs found
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
models versus observations
Sterne entstehen im Inneren von turbulenten Molekülwolken, die unter dem Einfluss ihrer eigenen Gravitation fragmentieren und kollabieren. So entsteht ein Sternhaufen aus hundert oder mehr Objekten. Der Sternentstehungsprozess wird durch das Wechselspiel von Überschallturbulenz und Gravitation reguliert. In dieser Arbeit werden verschiedene Eigenschaften solcher Sternhaufen, die mit Hilfe von numerischen Simulationen modelliert wurden, untersucht und mit Beobachtungsdaten verglichen. Dabei handelt es sich sowohl um Eigenschaften einzelner Protosterne, als auch um statistische Parameter des Sternhaufens als Ganzes...thesi
The spatial distribution of substellar objects in IC348 and the Orion Trapezium Cluster
Aims: Some theoretical scenarios suggest the formation of brown dwarfs as
ejected stellar embryos in star-forming clusters. Such a formation mechanism
can result in different spatial distributions of stars and substellar objects.
We aim to investigate the spatial structure of stellar and substellar objects
in two well sampled and nearby embedded clusters, namely IC348 and the Orion
Trapezium Cluster (OTC) to test this hypothesis. Methods:Deep near-infrared
K-band data complete enough to sample the substellar population in IC348 and
OTC are obtained from the literature. The spatial distribution of the K-band
point sources is analysed using the Minimum Spanning Tree (MST) method. The Q
parameter and the spanning trees are evaluated for stellar and substellar
objects as a function of cluster core radius R. Results: The stellar
population in both IC348 and OTC display a clustered distribution whereas the
substellar population is distributed homogeneously in space within twice the
cluster core radius. Although the substellar objects do not appear to be bound
by the cluster potential well, they are still within the limits of the cluster
and not significantly displaced from their birth sites. Conclusions: The
spatially homogeneous distribution of substellar objects is best explained by
assuming higher initial velocities, distributed in a random manner and going
through multiple interactions. The overall spatial coincidence of these objects
with the cluster locations can be understood if these objects are nevertheless
travelling slowly enough so as to feel the gravitational effect of the cluster.
The observations support the formation of substellar objects as ``ejected
stellar embryos''. Higher ejection velocities are necessary but net spatial
displacements may not be necessary to explain the observational data.Comment: 4 pages. Accepted by A&A Letter
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