Gas expulsion vs gas retention in young stellar clusters II: effects of cooling and mass segregation
Sergiy Silich, Guillermo Tenorio-Tagle

TL;DR
This paper investigates how cooling and mass segregation influence whether young stellar clusters expel or retain gas, affecting their evolution and the formation of multiple stellar populations.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the conditions under which gas is retained or expelled in dense star clusters, considering effects of cooling and mass segregation.
Findings
Massive, compact clusters can cool shocked winds, reducing feedback.
Cooling prevents global winds, favoring gas retention.
Critical conditions for gas expulsion vs. retention are identified.
Abstract
Gas expulsion or gas retention is a central issue in most of the models for multiple stellar populations and light element anti-correlations in globular clusters. The success of the residual matter expulsion or its retention within young stellar clusters has also a fundamental importance in order to understand how star formation proceeds in present-day and ancient star-forming galaxies and if proto-globular clusters with multiple stellar populations are formed in the present epoch. It is usually suggested that either the residual gas is rapidly ejected from star-forming clouds by stellar winds and supernova explosions, or that the enrichment of the residual gas and the formation of the second stellar generation occur so rapidly, that the negative stellar feedback is not significant. Here we continue our study of the early development of star clusters in the extreme environments and…
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