Young and intermediate-age massive star clusters
Soeren S. Larsen (Utrecht University, the Netherlands)

TL;DR
This paper reviews the formation, evolution, and characteristics of high-mass star clusters, highlighting their formation environments, lifetimes, mass functions, and differences across galaxy types, emphasizing the role of star formation conditions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the current understanding of high-mass star cluster formation and evolution, including new insights into mass limits and environmental effects.
Findings
Massive clusters form in dense molecular clouds.
Cluster lifetimes vary from a few million to over a billion years.
Massive clusters are more common in starburst galaxies.
Abstract
An overview of our current understanding of the formation and evolution of star clusters is given, with main emphasis on high-mass clusters. Clusters form deeply embedded within dense clouds of molecular gas. Left-over gas is cleared within a few million years and, depending on the efficiency of star formation, the clusters may disperse almost immediately or remain gravitationally bound. Current evidence suggests that a few percent of star formation occurs in clusters that remain bound, although it is not yet clear if this fraction is truly universal. Internal two-body relaxation and external shocks will lead to further, gradual dissolution on timescales of up to a few hundred million years for low-mass open clusters in the Milky Way, while the most massive clusters (> 10^5 Msun) have lifetimes comparable to or exceeding the age of the Universe. The low-mass end of the initial cluster…
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