Direct N-body simulations of globular clusters: (I) Palomar 14
Akram Hasani Zonoozi, Andreas H.W. Kuepper, Holger Baumgardt, Hosein, Haghi, Pavel Kroupa, Michael Hilker

TL;DR
This study presents the first direct N-body simulations of the globular cluster Palomar 14, exploring its initial conditions and the effects of primordial mass segregation and binary stars on its evolution.
Contribution
It introduces detailed N-body models of Palomar 14, including variations in initial conditions, mass segregation, and binary fraction, to explain its observed properties and mass function slope.
Findings
Dynamical mass segregation alone cannot explain Pal 14's shallow mass function.
High primordial mass segregation or a non-canonical IMF are needed to match observations.
Initial conditions likely involved a large half-mass radius and significant early gas expulsion effects.
Abstract
We present the first ever direct -body computations of an old Milky Way globular cluster over its entire life time on a star-by-star basis. Using recent GPU hardware at Bonn University, we have performed a comprehensive set of -body calculations to model the distant outer halo globular cluster Palomar 14 (Pal 14). By varying the initial conditions we aim at finding an initial -body model which reproduces the observational data best in terms of its basic parameters, i.e. half-light radius, mass and velocity dispersion. We furthermore focus on reproducing the stellar mass function slope of Pal 14 which was found to be significantly shallower than in most globular clusters. While some of our models can reproduce Pal 14's basic parameters reasonably well, we find that dynamical mass segregation alone cannot explain the mass function slope of Pal 14 when starting from the canonical…
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