Litcius/Paper detail

Does God play dice with star clusters?

Michael Y Grudić, Stella S. R. Offner, Dávid Guszejnov, Claude‐André Faucher‐Giguère, Philip F. Hopkins

2023The Open Journal of Astrophysics22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

When a detailed model of a stellar population is unavailable, it is most common to assume that stellar masses are independently and identically distributed according to some distribution: the universal initial mass function (IMF). However, stellar masses resulting from causal, long-ranged physics cannot be truly random and independent, and the IMF may vary with environment. To compare stochastic sampling with a physical model, we run a suite of 100 STARFORGE radiation magnetohydrodynamics simulations of low-mass star cluster formation in $2000M_\odot$ clouds that form $\sim 200$ stars each on average. The stacked IMF from the simulated clouds has a sharp truncation at $\sim 28 M_\odot$, well below the typically-assumed maximum stellar mass $M_{\rm up} \sim 100-150M_\odot$ and the total cluster mass. The sequence of star formation is not totally random: massive stars tend to start accreting sooner and finish later than the average star. However, final cluster properties such as maximum stellar mass and total luminosity have a similar amount of cloud-to-cloud scatter to random sampling. Therefore stochastic sampling does not generally model the stellar demographics of a star cluster as it is forming, but may describe the end result fairly well, if the correct IMF -- and its environment-dependent upper cutoff -- are known.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsAstrophysicsInitial mass functionStar clusterStar (game theory)StarsCluster (spacecraft)LuminosityStellar massStar formationTruncation (statistics)Mass segregationLuminosity functionPopulationStellar populationStatisticsGalaxyMathematicsComputer scienceSociologyDemographyProgramming languageAstrophysics and Star Formation StudiesStellar, planetary, and galactic studiesScientific Research and Discoveries