No compelling evidence of significant early star cluster disruption in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Richard de Grijs (1,2), Simon P. Goodwin (3), Peter Anders (1,4), ((1) Kavli Institute for Astronomy, Astrophysics, Peking University,, Beijing, China, (2) Department of Astronomy, Peking University, Beijing,, China, (3) Department of Physics, Astronomy, University of Sheffield,

TL;DR
This study finds no strong evidence of early star cluster disruption in the Large Magellanic Cloud for clusters with masses above 10^3 solar masses, challenging previous assumptions about cluster infant mortality.
Contribution
It provides a homogeneous analysis using multiple diagnostics to assess star cluster disruption, showing minimal disruption in the LMC contrary to prior beliefs.
Findings
No significant disruption observed for clusters aged 3-100 Myr
Disruption rates align with simple stellar dynamics models
Environmental differences may explain variations in disruption behavior
Abstract
Whether or not the rich star cluster population in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is affected by significant disruption during the first few x 10^8 yr of its evolution is an open question and the subject of significant current debate. Here, we revisit the problem, adopting a homogeneous data set of broad-band imaging observations. We base our analysis mainly on two sets of self-consistently determined LMC cluster ages and masses, one using standard modelling and one which takes into account the effects of stochasticity in the clusters' stellar mass functions. On their own, the results based on any of the three complementary analysis approaches applied here are merely indicative of the physical conditions governing the cluster population. However, the combination of our results from all three different diagnostics leaves little room for any conclusion other than that the optically…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
