Initial conditions for globular clusters and assembly of the old globular cluster population of the Milky Way
Michael Marks, Pavel Kroupa

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations and observed properties of 20 Galactic globular clusters to infer their initial conditions, formation environment, and the role of metallicity in their evolution within the Milky Way.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on the initial masses, sizes, and densities of globular clusters and their progenitor clouds, highlighting metallicity's influence on cluster formation and gas expulsion.
Findings
Progenitor cloud core masses ranged from 10^5 to 10^7 Msun.
Initial half-mass radii were typically below 1 pc, sometimes as small as 0.2 pc.
Metallicity correlates with cluster properties, affecting formation and gas expulsion processes.
Abstract
Comparing N-body calculations that include primordial residual-gas expulsion with the observed properties of 20 Galactic globular clusters (GCs) for which the stellar mass function (MF) has been measured, we constrain the time-scale over which the gas of their embedded counterparts must have been removed, the star formation efficiency the progenitor cloud must have had and the strength of the tidal-field the clusters must have formed in. The three parameters determine the expansion and mass-loss during residual-gas expulsion. After applying corrections for stellar and dynamical evolution we find birth cluster masses, sizes and densities for the GC sample and the same quantities for the progenitor gas clouds. The pre-cluster cloud core masses were between 10^5-10^7 Msun and half-mass radii were typically below 1 pc and reach down to 0.2 pc. We show that the low-mass present day MF slope,…
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