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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

On the fraction of star formation occurring in bound stellar clusters

TLDR
In this article, the authors present a theoretical framework in which bound stellar clusters arise naturally at the high-density end of the hierarchy of the interstellar medium (ISM) and due to short free-fall times, these high density regions achieve high local star formation efficiencies, enabling them to form bound clusters.
Abstract
We present a theoretical framework in which bound stellar clusters arise naturally at the high-density end of the hierarchy of the interstellar medium (ISM). Due to short free-fall times, these high-density regions achieve high local star formation efficiencies, enabling them to form bound clusters. Star-forming regions of lower density remain substructured and gas-rich, ending up unbound when the residual gas is expelled. Additionally, the tidal perturbation of star-forming regions by nearby, dense giant molecular clouds imposes a minimum density contrast required for the collapse to a bound cluster. The fraction of all star formation that occurs in bound stellar clusters (the cluster formation efficiency, hereafter CFE) follows by integration of these local clustering and survival properties over the full density spectrum of the ISM, and hence is set by galaxy-scale physics. We derive the CFE as a function of observable galaxy properties, and find that it increases with the gas surface density, from Γ ∼ 1 per cent in low-density galaxies to a peak value of Γ ∼ 70 per cent at densities of Σg ∼ 103 M⊙ pc−2. This explains the observation that the CFE increases with the star formation rate density in nearby dwarf, spiral and starburst galaxies. Indeed, comparing our model results with observed galaxies yields excellent agreement. The model is applied further by calculating the spatial variation of the CFE within single galaxies. We also consider the variation of the CFE with cosmic time and show that it increases with redshift, peaking in high-redshift, gas-rich disc galaxies. It is estimated that up to 30–35 per cent of all stars in the Universe once formed in bound stellar clusters. We discuss how our theory can be verified with Gaia and ALMA, and provide possible implementations for theoretical work and for simulations of galaxy formation and evolution.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The big problems in star formation: The star formation rate, stellar clustering, and the initial mass function

TL;DR: A review of the current state of the field of star formation can be found in this article, focusing on three central questions: What controls the rate at which gas in a galaxy converts to stars? What determines how those stars are clustered, and what fraction of the stellar population ends up in gravitationally-bound structures?
Journal ArticleDOI

Globular clusters as the relics of regular star formation in ‘normal’ high-redshift galaxies

TL;DR: In this paper, an end-to-end, two-phase model for the origin of globular clusters (GCs) is presented, where populations of stellar clusters form in the high-pressure discs of high-redshift ($z>2$) galaxies (a rapid-disruption phase due to tidal perturbations from the dense interstellar medium), after which the galaxy mergers associated with hierarchical galaxy formation redistribute the surviving, massive clusters into the galaxy haloes, where they remain until the present day.
Journal ArticleDOI

What controls star formation in the central 500 pc of the Galaxy

TL;DR: The star formation rate in the central molecular zone (CMZ) of the Milky Way is lower by a factor of ≥ 10 than expected for the substantial amount of dense gas it contains, which challenges current star formation theories as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The formation and assembly history of the Milky Way revealed by its globular cluster population

TL;DR: In this paper, the formation and assembly history of the Milky Way (MW) was reconstructed from the age-metallicity distribution of 96 Galactic globular clusters (GCs) to infer the merger tree of the MW.
Journal ArticleDOI

The dynamical evolution of molecular clouds near the Galactic Centre - I. Orbital structure and evolutionary timeline

TL;DR: In this article, an orbital model for the gas stream observed in the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) is presented by integrating orbits in the empirically constrained gravitational potential and represents a good fit to the observed position-velocity distribution of dense (n > several 103 cm-3) gas, reproducing all of its key properties.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Luminosity function and stellar evolution

TL;DR: In this paper, the evolutionary significance of the observed luminosity function for main-sequence stars in the solar neighborhood is discussed and it is shown that stars move off the main sequence after burning about 10 per cent of their hydrogen mass and that stars have been created at a uniform rate in a solar neighborhood for the last five billion years.
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Galactic stellar and substellar initial mass function

TL;DR: A review of the present-day mass function and initial mass function in various components of the Galaxy (disk, spheroid, young, and globular clusters) and in conditions characteristic of early star formation is presented in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the variation of the initial mass function

TL;DR: In this paper, the uncertainty inherent in any observational estimate of the IMF is investigated by studying the scatter introduced by Poisson noise and the dynamical evolution of star clusters, and it is found that this apparent scatter reproduces quite well the observed scatter in power-law index determinations, thus defining the fundamental limit within which any true variation becomes undetectable.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Global Schmidt law in star forming galaxies

TL;DR: In this paper, the Schmidt law was used to model the global star formation law over the full range of gas densities and star formation rates observed in galaxies, and the results showed that the SFR scales with the ratio of the gas density to the average orbital timescale.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Global Schmidt Law in Star Forming Galaxies

TL;DR: In this paper, the Schmidt law was used to model the global star formation law, over the full range of gas densities and star formation rates (SFRs) observed in galaxies.
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