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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Star cluster evolution, dynamical age estimation and the kinematical signature of star formation

Pavel Kroupa
- 15 Dec 1995 - 
- Vol. 277, Iss: 4, pp 1522-1540
TLDR
In this paper, the authors use N-body integration to follow the evolution of clusters of 200 binary systems with different initial half mass radii and simulate single-star clusters, and find no evidence for different dynamical properties of stellar systems at birth in the Hyades, Pleiades and Galactic field stellar samples.
Abstract
We use N-body integration to follow the evolution of clusters of 200 binary systems with different initial half mass radii $R_{0.5}$. We also simulate single-star clusters. All clusters evolve according to the same $n(t)$ curve, where $n(t)$ is the number density of stars in the central 2~pc sphere at time $t$. $n(t)$ and the lifetime are independent of (i) the inital proportion of binaries and (ii) the initial $R_{0.5}$. Mass segregation measures the dynamical age of the cluster. The proportion of binaries in the central cluster region is a sensitive indicator of the initial cluster concentration. If most stars form in binaries in a typical embedded cluster which is located at the edge of a giant molecular cloud, then we estimate that at most about 10~per cent of all pre-main sequence stars achieve near escape velocities from the molecular cloud. The large ejection velocities resulting from close encounters between binary systems imply a `halo' distribution of young stars over large areas surrounding star forming sites which is expected to have a significantly reduced binary proportion and a significantly increased proportion of stars with depleted circumstellar disks. We compare the time dependent model single star and system luminosity function in the central cluster region with the observational Hyades and Pleiades luminosity functions and find no evidence for different dynamical properties of stellar systems at birth in the Hyades, Pleiades and Galactic field stellar samples. The observed proportion of binary stars in the very young Trapezium Cluster is consistent with the early dynamical evolution of a cluster with a very high initial stellar number density.

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Citations
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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.
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Control of star formation by supersonic turbulence

TL;DR: A review of the successes and problems of both the classical dynamical theory and the standard theory of magnetostatic support, from both observational and theoretical perspectives, is given in this paper.

Control of Star Formation by Supersonic Turbulence

TL;DR: A review of the successes and problems of both the classical dynamical theory and the standard theory of magnetostatic support, from both observational and theoretical perspectives, is given in this article.
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Circumstellar Dust Disks in Taurus-Auriga: The Submillimeter Perspective

TL;DR: In this paper, a multwavelength submillimeter survey of 153 young stellar objects in the Taurus-Auriga star formation region is presented, with a detection rate of 61% to a completeness limit of 10 mJy (3 � ) at850� m.
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The Role of Pressure in GMC Formation II: The H2-Pressure Relation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the ratio of molecular to atomic gas in galaxies is determined by hydrostatic pressure and that the relation between the two is nearly linear, and propose a modified star formation prescription based on pressure determining the degree to which the ISM is molecular.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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