The dynamical state of stellar structure in star-forming regions
J. M. Diederik Kruijssen (1,2,3), Thomas Maschberger (4,5,6), Nickolas, Moeckel (4), Cathie J. Clarke (4), Nate Bastian (4,7), Ian A. Bonnell (8), ((1) Utrecht, (2) Leiden, (3) MPA Garching, (4) IoA Cambridge, (5) Bonn, (6), Grenoble, (7) Excellence Cluster Munich

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to analyze the dynamical properties of stars and subclusters in star-forming regions, revealing that early cluster disruption may be less due to gas expulsion and more influenced by tidal shocks in dense environments.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the dynamical state of star-forming subclusters and challenges the traditional view of infant mortality being primarily caused by gas expulsion.
Findings
Subclusters are near virial equilibrium with low gas fractions.
Gas-poor subclusters are weakly affected by gas expulsion.
Tidal shocks may significantly contribute to early cluster disruption.
Abstract
The fraction of star formation that results in bound star clusters is influenced by the density spectrum in which stars are formed and by the response of the stellar structure to gas expulsion. We analyse hydrodynamical simulations of turbulent fragmentation in star-forming regions to assess the dynamical properties of the resulting population of stars and (sub)clusters. Stellar subclusters are identified using a minimum spanning tree algorithm. When considering only the gravitational potential of the stars and ignoring the gas, we find that the identified subclusters are close to virial equilibrium (the typical virial ratio Q_vir~0.59, where virial equilibrium would be Q_vir~0.5). This virial state is a consequence of the low gas fractions within the subclusters, caused by the accretion of gas onto the stars and the accretion-induced shrinkage of the subclusters. Because the…
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