The properties of dynamically ejected runaway and hyper-runaway stars
Hagai B. Perets, Ladislav Subr

TL;DR
This study uses simulations and analytic models to analyze the velocity distribution, mass function, and binarity of runaway stars ejected from dense stellar clusters, highlighting the properties of high-velocity and hyper-velocity stars.
Contribution
It provides a detailed characterization of the ejection velocity distribution and properties of runaway stars from dynamical interactions in clusters, including the rarity of hyper-runaways.
Findings
High-velocity runaways follow a v^(-8/3) distribution.
Binarity decreases with ejection velocity, absent above 150 km/s.
Hyper-runaways are rare and cannot explain most hyper-velocity stars.
Abstract
Runaway stars are stars observed to have large peculiar velocities. Two mechanisms are thought to contribute to the ejection of runaway stars, both involve binarity (or higher multiplicity). In the binary supernova scenario a runaway star receives its velocity when its binary massive companion explodes as a supernova (SN). In the alternative dynamical ejection scenario, runaway stars are formed through gravitational interactions between stars and binaries in dense, compact clusters or cluster cores. Here we study the ejection scenario. We make use of extensive N-body simulations of massive clusters, as well as analytic arguments, in order to to characterize the expected ejection velocity distribution of runaways stars. We find the ejection velocity distribution of the fastest runaways (>~80 km s^-1) depends on the binary distribution in the cluster, consistent with our analytic toy…
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