Black holes and core expansion in massive star clusters
A.D. Mackey, M.I. Wilkinson, M.B. Davies, G.F. Gilmore

TL;DR
This study uses realistic N-body simulations to explore how massive star clusters in the Magellanic Clouds experience core expansion due to stellar evolution and black hole retention, explaining observed radius-age trends.
Contribution
It identifies two key processes driving long-term core expansion in massive star clusters and links these to observed structural evolution in the Magellanic Clouds.
Findings
Mass loss from stellar evolution causes early core expansion.
Black hole retention leads to prolonged core expansion.
The combined effects explain the observed radius-age trend.
Abstract
We present the results from realistic N-body modelling of massive star clusters in the Magellanic Clouds. We have computed eight simulations with N ~ 10^5 particles; six of these were evolved for at least a Hubble time. The aim of this modelling is to examine the possibility of large-scale core expansion in massive star clusters and search for a viable dynamical origin for the radius-age trend observed for such objects in the Magellanic Clouds. We identify two physical processes which can lead to significant and prolonged cluster core expansion: mass-loss due to rapid stellar evolution in a primordially mass segregated cluster, and heating due to a retained population of stellar-mass black holes. These two processes operate over different time-scales - the former occurs only at early times and cannot drive core expansion for longer than a few hundred Myr, while the latter typically does…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
