Mass distributions of star clusters for different star formation histories in a galaxy cluster environment
Christine Schulz, Jan Pflamm-Altenburg, and Pavel Kroupa

TL;DR
This paper models how different star formation histories influence the mass distribution of star clusters in galaxy clusters, introducing an improved sampling method and the concept of the integrated galactic embedded cluster mass function (IGECMF).
Contribution
It develops a theoretical framework linking star formation histories to star cluster mass distributions, including an improved sampling technique and the IGECMF concept.
Findings
IGECMF reproduces observed cluster mass distributions.
Star formation history shapes the high-mass turn-down in cluster populations.
Superposition of multiple formation epochs explains observed mass function features.
Abstract
Clusters of galaxies usually contain rich populations of globular clusters (GCs). We investigate how different star formation histories (SFHs) shape the final mass distribution of star clusters. We assume that every star cluster population forms during a formation epoch of length dt at a constant star-formation rate (SFR). The mass distribution of such a population is described by the embedded cluster mass function (ECMF), which is a pure power law extending to an upper limit M_max. Since the SFR determines M_max, the ECMF implicitly depends on the SFR. Starting with different SFHs, each SFH is divided into formation epochs of length dt at different SFRs. The requested mass function arises from the superposition of the star clusters of all formation epochs. An improved optimal sampling technique is introduced that allows generating number and mass distributions, both of which accurately…
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