The formation and evolution of star clusters in interacting galaxies
Moupiya Maji, Qirong Zhu, Yuexing Li, Jane Charlton, Lars Hernquist, and Alexander Knebe

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations to show that galaxy interactions create high-pressure regions that favor the formation of massive star clusters with a lognormal mass distribution, potentially explaining globular cluster origins.
Contribution
It demonstrates that galaxy interactions produce high-pressure environments leading to massive star clusters with a lognormal mass function, a novel insight into cluster formation during mergers.
Findings
Massive clusters form in high-pressure shock regions during galaxy interactions.
Cluster mass functions are quasi-lognormal with a peak around 10^6 solar masses.
The shape and peak of the mass function remain stable over time despite cluster destruction.
Abstract
Observations of globular clusters show that they have universal lognormal mass functions with a characteristic peak at , but the origin of this peaked distribution is highly debated. Here we investigate the formation and evolution of star clusters in interacting galaxies using high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations performed with two different codes in order to mitigate numerical artifacts. We find that massive star clusters in the range of form preferentially in the highly-shocked regions produced by galaxy interactions. The nascent cluster-forming clouds have high gas pressures in the range of , which is times higher than the typical pressure of the interstellar medium but consistent with recent observations of a pre-super star…
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