Similarities in Populations of Star Clusters
S. Michael Fall (Space Telescope Science Institute), Rupali Chandar, (University of Toledo)

TL;DR
This study compares star cluster populations across six galaxies, revealing remarkably similar mass and age distributions that follow power laws, suggesting universal formation and disruption processes.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence for the universality of star cluster distributions and offers a partial theoretical explanation for these similarities.
Findings
Mass functions follow a power law with exponent ~-1.9
Age distributions follow a power law with exponent ~-0.8
Distributions are approximately independent of each other
Abstract
We compare the observed mass functions and age distributions of star clusters in six well-studied galaxies: the Milky Way, Magellanic Clouds, M83, M51, and Antennae. In combination, these distributions span wide ranges of mass and age: and . We confirm that the distributions are well represented by power laws: with and with . The mass and age distributions are approximately independent of each other, ruling out simple models of mass-dependent disruption. As expected, there are minor differences among the exponents, at a level close to the true uncertainties, ~0.1--0.2. However, the overwhelming impression is the similarity of the mass functions and age distributions of clusters in these…
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