The photometric evolution of dissolving star clusters: II. Realistic models. Colours and M/L ratios
P. Anders (Utrecht), H.J.G.L.M Lamers (Utrecht), H. Baumgardt (Bonn)

TL;DR
This paper extends stellar population models by incorporating dynamical cluster dissolution effects, revealing significant impacts on colour, luminosity, and mass-to-light ratios, and providing insights into age estimation and dark matter presence.
Contribution
It introduces a new dimension to evolutionary synthesis models by including cluster disruption time, improving accuracy in modelling cluster evolution and interpreting observations.
Findings
Clusters become redder and fainter due to dissolution.
Mass-to-light ratios are significantly affected, especially for massive clusters.
Older age estimates are often overestimated by 20-200%."
Abstract
Evolutionary synthesis models are the prime method to construct models of stellar populations, and to derive physical parameters from observations. One of the assumptions for such models so far has been the time-independence of the stellar mass function. However, dynamical simulations of star clusters in tidal fields have shown the mass function to change due to the preferential removal of low-mass stars from clusters. Here we combine the results from dynamical simulations of star clusters in tidal fields with our evolutionary synthesis code GALEV to extend the models by a new dimension: the total cluster disruption time. We reanalyse the mass function evolution found in N-body simulations of star clusters in tidal fields, parametrise it as a function of age and total cluster disruption time and use this parametrisation to compute GALEV models as a function of age, metallicity and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Cephalopods and Marine Biology · Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies
