We study the production of main sequence mergers of tidally-synchronized
primordial short-period binaries. The principal ingredients of our calculation
are the angular momentum loss rates inferred from the spindown of open cluster
stars and the distribution of binary properties in young open clusters. We
compare our results with the expected number of systems that experience mass
transfer in post-main sequence phases of evolution and compute the
uncertainties in the theoretical predictions. We estimate that main-sequence
mergers can account for the observed number of single blue stragglers in M67.
Applied to the blue straggler population, this implies that such mergers are
responsible for about one quarter of the population of halo blue metal poor
stars, and at least one third of the blue stragglers in open clusters for
systems older than 1 Gyr. The observed trends as a function of age are
consistent with a saturated angular momentum loss rate for rapidly rotating
tidally synchronized systems. The predicted number of blue stragglers from main
sequence mergers alone is comparable to the number observed in globular
clusters, indicating that the net effect of dynamical interactions in dense
stellar environments is to reduce rather than increase the blue straggler
population. A population of subturnoff mergers of order 3-4% of the upper main
sequence population is also predicted for stars older than 4 Gyr, which is
roughly comparable to the small population of highly Li-depleted halo dwarfs.
Other observational tests are discussed.Comment: number of pages depends on font, margins, columns etc (58 with given
format), 14 figures, submitted to the Astrophysical Journa