The formation of very wide binaries during the star cluster dissolution phase
M.B.N. Kouwenhoven (KIAA Beijing), S.P. Goodwin (Sheffield), Richard, J. Parker (Sheffield), M.B. Davies (Lund), D. Malmberg (Lund), P. Kroupa, (AIfA Bonn)

TL;DR
This paper proposes that very wide binaries in the Galactic field originate during the dissolution phase of star clusters, with simulations showing their formation depends on initial conditions and cluster properties.
Contribution
It introduces a formation mechanism for wide binaries during cluster dissolution, supported by N-body simulations, explaining their observed properties and prevalence.
Findings
Wide binary fraction in simulations ranges from 1-30%.
Wide binary properties depend on initial cluster size and mass.
Predicted binary fraction is smaller than observed, suggesting additional factors.
Abstract
Over the past few decades, numerous wide (>1000 au) binaries in the Galactic field and halo have been discovered. Their existence cannot be explained by the process of star formation or by dynamical interactions in the field, and their origin has long been a mystery. We explain the origin of these wide binaries by formation during the dissolution phase of young star clusters: an initially unbound pair of stars may form a binary when their distance in phase-space is small. Using N-body simulations, we find that the resulting wide binary fraction in the semi-major axis range 1000 au - 0.1 pc for individual clusters is 1-30%, depending on the initial conditions. The existence of numerous wide binaries in the field is consistent with observational evidence that most clusters start out with a large degree of substructure. The wide binary fraction decreases strongly with increasing cluster…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
