Observational constraints on star cluster formation theory - I. The mass-radius relation
S. Pfalzner, H. Kirk, A. Sills, J. S. Urquhart, J. Kauffmann, M. A., Kuhn, A. Bhandare, K. M. Menten

TL;DR
This paper identifies a consistent mass-radius relation for star clusters in the solar neighborhood, providing key constraints for theories and simulations of clustered star formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates a clear mass-radius correlation in embedded clusters and dense gas clumps, linking gas properties to stellar cluster characteristics.
Findings
A power-law relation between cluster mass and radius with gamma ≈ 1.7.
Star formation efficiency estimated at approximately 18%.
Similar mass-size relations found for gas clumps and star clusters.
Abstract
Stars form predominantly in groups usually denoted as clusters or associations. The observed stellar groups display a broad spectrum of masses, sizes and other properties, so it is often assumed that there is no underlying structure in this diversity. Here we show that the assumption of an unstructured multitude of cluster or association types might be misleading. Current data compilations of clusters show correlations between cluster mass, size, age, maximum stellar mass etc. In this first paper we take a closer look at the correlation of cluster mass and radius. We use literature data to explore relations in cluster and molecular core properties in the solar neighborhood. We show that for embedded clusters in the solar neighborhood there exists a clear correlation between cluster mass and half-mass radius of the form with gamma = 1.7 +/-0.2. This correlation…
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.
