Early evolution of embedded clusters
J. E. Dale, B. Ercolano, I.A. Bonnell

TL;DR
This study investigates how winds and photoionizing radiation from massive stars influence the evolution of embedded stellar clusters in turbulent molecular clouds, revealing complex effects on star formation rates, gas dynamics, and observable properties.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the impact of stellar feedback on cluster evolution, showing minimal dynamical disruption but significant effects on observable features and gas expulsion.
Findings
Feedback increases dense gas but reduces star formation efficiency.
Star formation often proceeds slower than freefall in dense gas.
Feedback causes rapid changes in cluster observability and gas expulsion.
Abstract
We examine the combined effects of winds and photoionizing radiation from O--type stars on embedded stellar clusters formed in model turbulent molecular clouds covering a range of masses and radii. We find that feedback is able to increase the quantities of dense gas present, but decreases the rate and efficiency of the conversion of gas to stars relative to control simulations in which feedback is absent. Star formation in these calculations often proceeds at a rate substantially slower than the freefall rate in the dense gas. This decoupling is due to the weakening of, and expulsion of gas from, the deepest parts of the clouds' potential wells where most of the star formation occurs in the control simulations. This results in large fractions of the stellar populations in the feedback simulation becoming dissociated from dense gas. However, where star formation \emph{does} occur in…
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