The early evolution of the star cluster mass function |
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Authors: | M. Gieles |
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Affiliation: | European Southern Observatory, Casilla 19001, Santiago 19, Chile |
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Abstract: | Several recent studies have shown that the star cluster initial mass function (CIMF) can be well approximated by a power law, with indications for a steepening or truncation at high masses. This contribution considers the evolution of such a mass function due to cluster disruption, with emphasis on the part of the mass function that is observable in the first ∼1 Gyr. A Schechter type function is used for the CIMF, with a power-law index of −2 at low masses and an exponential truncation at M *. Cluster disruption due to the tidal field of the host galaxy and encounters with giant molecular clouds flattens the low-mass end of the mass function, but there is always a part of the 'evolved Schechter function' that can be approximated by a power law with index −2. The mass range for which this holds depends on age, τ, and shifts to higher masses roughly as τ0.6 . Mean cluster masses derived from luminosity-limited samples increase with age very similarly due to the evolutionary fading of clusters. Empirical mass functions are, therefore, approximately power laws with index −2, or slightly steeper, at all ages. The results are illustrated by an application to the star cluster population of the interacting galaxy M51, which can be well described by a model with M *= (1.9 ± 0.5) × 105 M⊙ and a short (mass-dependent) disruption time destroying M * clusters in roughly a Gyr. |
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Keywords: | globular clusters: general open clusters and associations: general galaxies: star clusters |
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