Inverse dynamical population synthesis: Constraining the initial conditions of young stellar clusters by studying their binary populations
Michael Marks, Pavel Kroupa

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of binary star populations in young clusters to infer their initial conditions, revealing environment-dependent dynamical effects and constraining birth parameters across various star-forming regions.
Contribution
It introduces a method to constrain initial cluster conditions by modeling binary populations, demonstrating that environment-driven dynamical evolution explains observed properties.
Findings
Model reproduces binary properties across diverse clusters.
Constrains initial cluster mass and size parameters.
Identifies a weak correlation between cluster mass and radius.
Abstract
Binary populations in young star clusters show multiplicity fractions both lower and up to twice as high as those observed in the Galactic field. We follow the evolution of a population of binary stars in dense and loose star clusters starting with an invariant initial binary population and a formal multiplicity fraction of unity, and demonstrate that these models can explain the observed binary properties in Taurus, Rho-Ophiuchus, Chamaeleon, Orion, IC 348, Upper Scorpius A, Praesepe, and the Pleiades. The model needs to consider solely different birth densities for these regions. The evolved theoretical orbital-parameter distributions are highly probable parent distributions for the observed ones. We constrain the birth conditions (stellar mass, M_ecl, and half-mass radius, r_h) for the derived progenitors of the star clusters and the overall present-day binary fractions allowed by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
