Reverse dynamical evolution of Eta Chamaeleontis
Christophe Becker, Estelle Moraux, Gaspard Duch\^ene, Thomas, Maschberger, Warrick Lawson

TL;DR
This study investigates whether pure dynamical evolution can explain eta Chamaeleontis's unusual lack of low-mass objects and wide binaries, concluding that initial star formation conditions are likely responsible.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that pure dynamical evolution from universal initial conditions cannot reproduce eta Cha's peculiar properties, suggesting star formation processes shape these features.
Findings
Pure dynamical evolution cannot produce eta Cha's observed low-mass star deficiency.
A truncated IMF without very low mass objects can reproduce core properties.
The association's properties likely originate from star formation conditions, not evolution.
Abstract
In the scope of the star formation process, it is unclear how the environment shapes the initial mass function (IMF). While observations of open clusters propose a universal picture for the IMF from the substellar domain up to a few solar masses, the young association eta Chamaeleontis presents an apparent lack of low mass objects (m<0.1 Msun). Another unusual feature of this cluster is the absence of wide binaries with a separation > 50 AU. We aim to test whether dynamical evolution alone can reproduce the peculiar properties of the association assuming a universal IMF. We use a pure N-body code to simulate the dynamical evolution of the cluster for 10 Myr, and compare the results with observations. A wide range of values for the initial parameters are tested in order to identify the initial state that would most likely lead to observations. In this context we also investigate the…
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