Gravitational scattering of stars and clusters and the heating of the Galactic disk
Bengt Gustafsson, Ross Church, Melvyn B. Davies, Hans Rickman

TL;DR
This study investigates how gravitational interactions with GMCs, spiral arms, and the Galactic bar contribute to the heating and vertical dispersion of stars and clusters in the Galactic disk, using simulations to match observed stellar velocity spreads.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation-based analysis of stellar scattering mechanisms, demonstrating that GMCs and spiral arms can account for disk heating and high-altitude clusters, with new insights into cluster formation and scattering.
Findings
Velocity dispersions are well reproduced by simulations.
Approximately 0.5% of old clusters are scattered above 400 pc.
GMCs and spiral arms sufficiently explain disk heating.
Abstract
Could the velocity spread, increasing with time, in the Galactic disk be explained as a result of gravitational interactions of stars with giant molecular clouds (GMCs) and spiral arms? Do the old open clusters high above the Galactic plane provide clues to this question? We explore the effects on stellar orbits of scattering by inhomogeneities in the Galactic potential due to GMCs, spiral arms and the Galactic bar, and whether high-altitude clusters could have formed in orbits closer to the Galactic plane and later been scattered. Simulations of test-particle motions are performed in a realistic Galactic potential. The effects of the internal structure of GMCs are explored. The destruction of clusters in GMC collisions is treated in detail with N-body simulations of the clusters. The observed velocity dispersions of stars as a function of time are well reproduced. The GMC structure…
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