The initial mass function of star clusters that form in turbulent molecular clouds
M. S. Fujii, S. Portegies Zwart

TL;DR
This study combines SPH and N-body simulations to investigate the initial mass function of star clusters formed in turbulent molecular clouds, revealing a hierarchical merging process and mass functions consistent with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation approach linking molecular cloud turbulence to star cluster mass functions, matching observed distributions and scaling relations.
Findings
Cluster mass function follows a Schechter form with a slope around -1.7.
Mass of the most massive cluster scales with cloud mass as 6.1 M_g^{0.51}.
Cluster mass functions evolve to match observed distributions in galaxies.
Abstract
We simulate the formation and evolution of young star clusters using the combination of SPH simulations and direct N-body simulations. We start by performing SPH simulations of the giant molecular cloud with a turbulent velocity field, a mass of to , and a density between and . We continue the SPH simulations for a free-fall time scale, and analyze the resulting structure of the collapsed cloud. We subsequently replace a density-selected subset of SPH particles with stars by adopting a local star-formation efficiency proportional to . As a consequence, the local star formation efficiency exceeds 30 %, whereas globally only a few % of the gas is converted to stars. The stellar distribution by the time gas is converted to stars is very clumpy, with typically a dozen bound conglomerates that consist of 100 to…
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