An Analytic Model for Blue Straggler Formation in Globular Clusters
Nathan Leigh, Alison Sills, Christian Knigge

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytic model for blue straggler formation in globular clusters, emphasizing binary evolution and stellar collisions, and compares predictions with observed data to understand formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a model highlighting binary evolution as the dominant formation channel and explores the effects of cluster properties and dynamical encounters.
Findings
Binary evolution dominates blue straggler production.
Core binary fraction inversely proportional to cluster luminosity.
Blue straggler formation is enhanced by dynamical encounters.
Abstract
We present an analytic model for blue straggler formation in globular clusters. We assume that blue stragglers are formed only through stellar collisions and binary star evolution, and compare our predictions to observed blue straggler numbers taken from the catalogue of Leigh, Sills & Knigge (2011). We can summarize our key results as follows: (1) Binary star evolution consistently dominates blue straggler production in all our best-fitting models. (2) In order to account for the observed sub-linear dependence of blue straggler numbers on the core masses (Knigge, Leigh & Sills 2009), the core binary fraction must be inversely proportional to the total cluster luminosity and should always exceed at least a few percent. (3) In at least some clusters, blue straggler formation must be enhanced by dynamical encounters (either via direct collisions or by stimulating mass-transfer to occur by…
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