On the Star Formation Rate - Brightest Cluster Relation: Estimating the peak SFR in post-merger galaxies
N. Bastian (IoA-Cambridge)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the relation between galaxy star-formation rates and the luminosity of their brightest clusters, using simulations to refine models and estimate past peak SFRs in post-merger galaxies, revealing a consistent cluster formation mode.
Contribution
It demonstrates that a Schechter function better fits cluster luminosity data than a pure power-law and introduces a method to estimate historical peak SFRs in merger galaxies.
Findings
A Schechter function fits cluster luminosity data well.
Bound cluster formation accounts for about 8% of total star formation.
Post-merger galaxies likely experienced ULIRG/HLIRG phases.
Abstract
We further the recent discussion on the relation between the star-formation rate (SFR) of a galaxy and the luminosity of its brightest star-cluster (SFR vs. M). We first show that the observed trend between SFR vs. M is due to the brightest cluster in a galaxy being preferentially young (<15 Myr - for a constant SFR) and hence a good tracer of the current SFR, although we give notable exceptions to this rule. Using a series of Monte Carlo simulations we show that a pure power-law mass function with index, alpha=2, is ruled out by the current data. Instead we find that a Schechter function (i.e. a power-law with an exponential truncation at the high mass end) provides an excellent fit to the data. Additionally, these simulations show that bound cluster formation (in Msun/yr) represents only ~8+-3% of the total star-formation within a galaxy,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
