Formation of stars and clusters over cosmological time
Bruce G. Elmegreen

TL;DR
This paper discusses the hierarchical and dynamical processes of star and cluster formation over cosmic time, emphasizing the role of turbulence, gravity, and environmental factors in shaping stellar structures and globular clusters.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive framework linking star formation, cluster development, and galaxy evolution through hierarchical and dynamical processes.
Findings
Star formation occurs across a hierarchy from kiloparsec scales to stellar systems.
Cluster formation efficiency increases with gas density and varies with galactic environment.
Globular clusters' properties relate to galaxy mass and metallicity, explaining their distribution.
Abstract
The concept that stars form in the modern era began some 60 years ago with the key observation of expanding OB associations. Now we see that these associations are an intermediate scale in a cascade of hierarchical structures that begins on the ambient Jeans length close to a kiloparsec in size and continues down to the interiors of clusters, perhaps even to binary and multiple stellar systems. The origin of this structure lies with the dynamical nature of cloud and star formation, driven by supersonic turbulence and interstellar gravity. Dynamical star formation is relatively fast compared to the timescale for cosmic accretion, and then the star formation rate keeps up with the accretion rate, leading to a sequence of near-equilibrium states during galaxy formation and evolution. Dynamical star formation also helps to explain the formation of bound clusters, which require a local…
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