SCYON Abstract

Received on September 13 2010

Star Clusters Under Stress: Why Small Clusters Cannot Dynamically Relax

AuthorsJoseph M. Converse and Steven W. Stahler
AffiliationAstronomy Department, U. of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
Accepted byMonthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
ContactSstahler@astro.berkeley.edu
URLhttp://arxiv.org/abs/1009.2050
Links

Abstract

Utilizing a series of N-body simulations, we argue that gravitationally bound stellar clusters of modest population evolve very differently from the picture presented by classical dynamical relaxation theory. The system's most massive stars rapidly sink toward the center and form binary systems. These binaries efficiently heat the cluster, reversing any incipient core contraction and driving a subsequent phase of global expansion. Most previous theoretical studies demonstrating deep and persistent dynamical relaxation have either conflated the process with mass segregation, ignored three-body interactions, or else adopted the artificial assumption that all cluster members are single stars of identical mass. In such a uniform-mass cluster, binary formation is greatly delayed, as we confirm here both numerically and analytically. The relative duration of core contraction and global expansion is affected by stellar evolution, which causes the most massive stars to die out before they form binaries. In clusters of higher N, the epoch of dynamical relaxation lasts for progressively longer periods. By extrapolating our results to much larger populations, we can understand, at least qualitatively, why some globular clusters reach the point of true core collapse.