scholarly journals The effect of primordial mass segregation on the size scale of globular clusters

2014 ◽  
Vol 444 (4) ◽  
pp. 3699-3708 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hosein Haghi ◽  
Seyed Mohammad Hoseini-Rad ◽  
Akram Hasani Zonoozi ◽  
Andreas H. W. Küpper
1999 ◽  
Vol 190 ◽  
pp. 460-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. F. Beaulieu ◽  
R. Elson ◽  
G. Gilmore ◽  
R. A. Johnson ◽  
N. Tanvir ◽  
...  

We present details of the database from a large Cycle 7 HST project to study the formation and evolution of rich star clusters in the LMC (see Elson et al., this volume). Our data set, which includes NICMOS, WFPC2 and STIS images of 8 clusters, will enable us to derive deep luminosity functions for the clusters and to investigate the universality of the stellar IMF. We will look for age spreads in the youngest clusters, quantify the population of binary stars in the cores of the clusters and at the half-mass radii, and follow the development of mass segregation.


2016 ◽  
Vol 823 (2) ◽  
pp. 135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Pasquato ◽  
Paolo Miocchi ◽  
Sohn Bong Won ◽  
Young-Wook Lee

2019 ◽  
Vol 490 (2) ◽  
pp. 1498-1508
Author(s):  
Nicolas Longeard ◽  
Nicolas Martin ◽  
Rodrigo A Ibata ◽  
Michelle L M Collins ◽  
Benjamin P M Laevens ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We present a photometric and spectroscopic study of the Milky Way satellite Laevens 3. Using MegaCam/Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope $g$ and $i$ photometry and Keck II/DEIMOS multi-object spectroscopy, we refine the structural and stellar properties of the system. The Laevens 3 colour–magnitude diagram shows that it is quite metal-poor, old ($13.0 \pm 1.0$ Gyr), and at a distance of $61.4 \pm 1.0$ kpc, partly based on two RR Lyrae stars. The system is faint ($M_V = -2.8^{+0.2}_{-0.3}$ mag) and compact ($r_h = 11.4 \pm 1.0$ pc). From the spectroscopy, we constrain the systemic metallicity (${\rm [Fe/H]}_\mathrm{spectro} = -1.8 \pm 0.1$ dex) but the metallicity and velocity dispersions are both unresolved. Using Gaia DR2, we infer a mean proper motion of $(\mu _\alpha ^*,\mu _\delta)=(0.51 \pm 0.28,-0.83 \pm 0.27)$ mas yr−1, which, combined with the system’s radial velocity ($\langle v_r\rangle = -70.2 \pm 0.5 {\rm \, km \,\, s^{-1}}$), translates into a halo orbit with a pericenter and apocenter of $40.7 ^{+5.6}_{-14.7}$ and $85.6^{+17.2}_{-5.9}$ kpc, respectively. Overall, Laevens 3 shares the typical properties of the Milky Way’s outer halo globular clusters. Furthermore, we find that this system shows signs of mass segregation that strengthens our conclusion that Laevens 3 is a globular cluster.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (S351) ◽  
pp. 528-531
Author(s):  
S. Torniamenti ◽  
G. Bertin ◽  
P. Bianchini

AbstractAs a result of the slow action of two-body encounters, globular clusters develop mass segregation and attain a condition of only partial energy equipartition even in their central, most relaxed regions. Realistic numerical simulations show that, during the process, a radially-biased anisotropy profile slowly builds up, mimicking that resulting from incomplete violent relaxation. Commonly used dynamical models, such as the one-component King models, cannot describe these properties. Here we show that simple two-component models based on a distribution function originally conceived to describe elliptical galaxies, recently truncated and adapted to the context of globular clusters, can describe in detail what is observed in complex and realistic numerical simulations.


2019 ◽  
Vol 485 (4) ◽  
pp. 5752-5760 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruggero de Vita ◽  
Michele Trenti ◽  
Morgan MacLeod

Abstract The level of mass segregation in the core of globular clusters has been previously proposed as a potential indicator of the dynamical constituents of the system, such as presence of a significant population of stellar-mass black holes (BHs), or even a central intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH). However, its measurement is limited to clusters with high-quality Hubble Space Telescope data. Thanks to a set of state-of-the-art direct N-body simulations with up to 200k particles inclusive of stellar evolution, primordial binaries, and varying BH/neutron stars, we highlight for the first time the existence of a clear and tight linear relation between the degree of mass segregation and the cluster structural concentration index. The latter is defined as the ratio of the radii containing 5 per cent and 50 per cent of the integrated light (R5/R50), making it robustly measurable without the need to individually resolve low-mass stars. Our simulations indicate that given R5/R50, the mass segregation Δm (defined as the difference in main-sequence median mass between centre and half-light radius) is expressed as Δm/M⊙ = −1.166R5/R50 + 0.3246, with a root-mean-square error of 0.0148. In addition, we can explain its physical origin and the values of the fitted parameters through basic analytical modelling. Such correlation is remarkably robust against a variety of initial conditions (including presence of primordial binaries and IMBHs) and cluster ages, with a slight dependence in best-fitting parameters on the prescriptions used to measure the quantities involved. Therefore, this study highlights the potential to develop a new observational tool to gain insight on the dynamical status of globular clusters and on its dark remnants.


2019 ◽  
Vol 876 (1) ◽  
pp. 59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhongqun Cheng ◽  
Zhiyuan Li ◽  
Xiangdong Li ◽  
Xiaojie Xu ◽  
Taotao Fang

2019 ◽  
Vol 488 (1) ◽  
pp. 362-380
Author(s):  
Yuvineza J Gomez-Leyton ◽  
Luisberis Velazquez

ABSTRACT The γ-exponential models were previously proposed as a phenomenological attempt to characterize the properties of stellar systems with a quasi-stationary evolution under the incidence evaporation, e.g. globular clusters. They represent a parametric family of distributions that unify profiles with isothermal cores and polytropic haloes, thus providing a suitable generalization for several models available in the literature. We start our discussion revisiting some results concerning the case of single-mass systems. In particular, we emphasized that these models predict the existence of a new type of collective phenomenon: the asymptotic gravothermal collapse. This gravitational instability differs from the normal gravothermal collapse (e.g. the one associated with isothermal model) because it requires that the system releases an infinite amount of energy. Afterwards, we enter to analyse how a mass spectrum modifies the thermodynamics of these models, in particular, the associated collective phenomena. Although the theoretical description concerns to any multimass system, our computational study addresses the simplest case: the bi-component system. This analysis allows a major understanding about the thermodynamics of stellar systems under the presence of evaporation and mass segregation. For the present models, the growth of mass segregation does not affect the system evaporation disruption but favours gravothermal collapse, e.g. it tends to reduce the energy interval of stability by increasing the lower bound critical energy associated with this collective phenomenon. Extreme cases appear under certain conditions, where gravothermal collapse changes its character from asymptotic to normal.


2018 ◽  
Vol 617 ◽  
pp. A69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Václav Pavlík ◽  
Tereza Jeřábková ◽  
Pavel Kroupa ◽  
Holger Baumgardt

Context. Recent research has been constraining the retention fraction of black holes (BHs) in globular clusters by comparing the degree of mass segregation with N-body simulations. They are consistent with an upper limit of the retention fraction being 50% or less. Aims. In this work, we focus on direct simulations of the dynamics of BHs in star clusters. We aim to constrain the effective distribution of natal kicks that BHs receive during supernova (SN) explosions and to estimate the BH retention fraction.Methods. We used the collisional N-body code nbody6 to measure the retention fraction of BHs for a given set of parameters, which are: the initial mass of a star cluster, the initial half-mass radius, and σBH, which sets the effective Maxwellian BH velocity kick distribution. We compare these direct N-body models with our analytic estimates and newest observational constraints. Results. The numerical simulations show that for the one-dimensional velocity kick dispersion σBH < 50 km s−1, clusters with radii of 2 pc and that are initially more massive than 5 × 103 M⊙ retain more than 20% of BHs within their half-mass radii. Our simple analytic model yields a number of retained BHs that is in good agreement with the N-body models. Furthermore, the analytic estimates show that ultra-compact dwarf galaxies should have retained more than 80% of their BHs for σBH ≤ 190 km s−1. Although our models do not contain primordial binaries, in the most compact clusters with 103 stars, we have found evidence of delayed SN explosions producing a surplus of BHs compared to the IMF due to dynamically formed binary stars. These cases do not occur in the more populous or expanded clusters.


2020 ◽  
Vol 892 (1) ◽  
pp. 16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhongqun Cheng ◽  
Huijun Mu ◽  
Zhiyuan Li ◽  
Xiaojie Xu ◽  
Wei Wang ◽  
...  

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