Lifetimes of tidally limited star clusters with different radii
M. Gieles (1), H. Baumgardt (2) ((1) ESO/Santiago, (2) Bonn)

TL;DR
This study analyzes how the lifetime of star clusters depends on their initial size and environment, revealing different regimes of dissolution and implications for globular cluster survival and mass functions.
Contribution
It provides a new analytical and simulation-based understanding of cluster dissolution timescales across different size regimes and initial conditions.
Findings
In the tidal regime, dissolution rate is nearly independent of initial size.
Clusters starting in the isolated regime have dissolution times scaling as R^-1.5.
Cluster lifetime varies less than 1.5 times with initial size for realistic parameters.
Abstract
We study the escape rate, dN/dt, from clusters with different radii in a tidal field using analytical predictions and direct N-body simulations. We find that dN/dt depends on the ratio R=r_h/r_j, where r_h is the half-mass radius and r_j the radius of the zero-velocity surface. For R>0.05, the "tidal regime", there is almost no dependence of dN/dt on R. To first order this is because the fraction of escapers per relaxation time, t_rh, scales approximately as R^1.5, which cancels out the r_h^1.5 term in t_rh. For R<0.05, the "isolated regime", dN/dt scales as R^-1.5. Clusters that start with their initial R, Ri, in the tidal regime dissolve completely in this regime and their t_dis is insensitive to the initial r_h. We predicts that clusters that start with Ri<0.05 always expand to the tidal regime before final dissolution. Their t_dis has a shallower dependence on Ri than what would be…
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