Dissolution is the solution: on the reduced mass-to-light ratios of Galactic globular clusters
J. M. Diederik Kruijssen, Steffen Mieske

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that low-mass star depletion due to dynamical dissolution can explain the lower observed mass-to-light ratios in Galactic globular clusters compared to canonical models.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed analysis linking dissolution timescales and low-mass star loss to observed M/L ratios, validating the depletion hypothesis with model predictions.
Findings
Predicted M/L ratios agree with observations for half of the sample.
Dissolution and star depletion explain the M/L discrepancy.
Correlation between stellar MF slope and M/L ratio is supported.
Abstract
The observed dynamical mass-to-light (M/L) ratios of globular clusters (GCs) are systematically lower than those expected from `canonical' simple stellar population models, which do not account for the preferential loss of low-mass stars due to energy equipartition. It was recently shown that low-mass star depletion can qualitatively explain the M/L discrepancy. To verify whether it is indeed the driving mechanism, we derive dissolution timescales and use these to predict the M/L_V ratios of the 24 Galactic GCs for which orbital parameters and dynamical M/L_V are known. We also predict the slopes of their low-mass stellar mass functions (MFs). We use the SPACE cluster models, which include dynamical dissolution, low-mass star depletion, stellar evolution, stellar remnants and various metallicities. The predicted M/L_V are in 1 sigma agreement with the observations for 12 out of 24 GCs.…
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