The extent to which the projected distribution of stars in a cluster is due
to a large-scale radial gradient, and the extent to which it is due to fractal
sub-structure, can be quantified -- statistically -- using the measure Q=mˉ/sˉ. Here mˉ is the normalized mean edge length of its
minimum spanning tree (i.e. the shortest network of edges connecting all stars
in the cluster) and sˉ is the correlation length (i.e. the normalized
mean separation between all pairs of stars).
We show how Q can be indirectly applied to grey-scale images by
decomposing the image into a distribution of points from which mˉ and
sˉ can be calculated. This provides a powerful technique for comparing
the distribution of dense gas in a molecular cloud with the distribution of the
stars that condense out of it. We illustrate the application of this technique
by comparing Q values from simulated clouds and star clusters.Comment: Accepted 2010 October 27. Received 2010 October 25; in original form
2010 September 13 The paper contains 7 figures and 2 table