论文标题
初始密度曲线对巨大分子云中巨大恒星簇形成的影响
Effects of initial density profiles on massive star cluster formation in giant molecular clouds
论文作者
论文摘要
我们执行一组流体动力模拟,以研究巨型分子云(GMC)的初始密度曲线如何影响其随后的进化。我们发现,整个云的恒星形成持续时间和综合恒星形成效率对选择不同的轮廓不敏感,但主要由重力崩溃和恒星反馈之间的相互作用控制。尽管有这种相似性,但具有不同轮廓的GMC显示出巨大的恒星形成模式。对于较浅的剖面,GMC首先片段成许多自我磨碎的核心,并形成在整个云中分布的子群体。后来将这些子群体组装成``层次上的''。相比之下,对于较陡的曲线,很快就会在云的中心形成一个大型簇,然后通过气体积聚逐渐生长其质量。因此,比具有较陡轮的云层出现的中央簇较浅,并且旋转较小。这是因为1)在较浅轮廓中的质量和角动量的很大一部分存储在子群体的轨道运动中,无法合并到中央簇中2)较浅的剖面中频繁的层次合并,导致质量和角动量的进一步损失,并通过暴力的松弛和潮汐破坏。令人鼓舞的是,较陡的轮廓中的簇旋转程度与最近对年轻和中年龄群的观察结果一致。我们推测,旋转的球状簇可能是通过早期宇宙中心浓缩云的``积聚''模式形成的。
We perform a suite of hydrodynamic simulations to investigate how initial density profiles of giant molecular clouds (GMCs) affect their subsequent evolution. We find that the star formation duration and integrated star formation efficiency of the whole clouds are not sensitive to the choice of different profiles but are mainly controlled by the interplay between gravitational collapse and stellar feedback. Despite this similarity, GMCs with different profiles show dramatically different modes of star formation. For shallower profiles, GMCs first fragment into many self-gravitation cores and form sub-clusters that distributed throughout the entire clouds. These sub-clusters are later assembled ``hierarchically'' to central clusters. In contrast, for steeper profiles, a massive cluster is quickly formed at the center of the cloud and then gradually grows its mass via gas accretion. Consequently, central clusters that emerged from clouds with shallower profiles are less massive and show less rotation than those with the steeper profiles. This is because 1) a significant fraction of mass and angular momentum in shallower profiles is stored in the orbital motion of the sub-clusters that are not able to merge into the central clusters 2) frequent hierarchical mergers in the shallower profiles lead to further losses of mass and angular momentum via violent relaxation and tidal disruption. Encouragingly, the degree of cluster rotations in steeper profiles is consistent with recent observations of young and intermediate-age clusters. We speculate that rotating globular clusters are likely formed via an ``accretion'' mode from centrally-concentrated clouds in the early Universe.