The Sparsest Clusters With O Stars
J. B. Lamb, M. S. Oey, J. K. Werk, L. D. Ingleby

TL;DR
This study investigates whether high-mass stars can form in sparse, isolated environments by observing OB stars in the SMC and comparing their properties with stochastic cluster formation models.
Contribution
It provides evidence that massive stars can form in sparse clusters through stochastic sampling from a universal IMF, challenging the need for a mass-cluster relation.
Findings
Sparse clusters with <10 stars are consistent with stochastic IMF sampling.
No evidence found for a maximum star mass to cluster mass relation.
Results favor core accretion models over competitive accretion models.
Abstract
There is much debate on how high-mass star formation varies with environment, and whether the sparsest star-forming environments are capable of forming massive stars. To address this issue, we have observed eight apparently isolated OB stars in the SMC using HST's Advanced Camera for Surveys. Five of these objects appear as isolated stars, two of which are confirmed to be runaways. The remaining three objects are found to exist in sparse clusters, with <10 companion stars revealed, having masses of 1-4 solar mass. Stochastic effects dominate in these sparse clusters, so we perform Monte Carlo simulations to explore how our observations fit within the framework of empirical, galactic cluster properties. We generate clusters using a simplistic -2 power-law distribution for either the number of stars per cluster (N_*) or cluster mass (M_cl). These clusters are then populated with stars…
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