Mixing of metals during star cluster formation: statistics and implications for chemical tagging
Lucia Armillotta, Mark R. Krumholz, Yusuke Fujimoto

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore how turbulence mixes metals during star cluster formation, revealing a natural 1 pc scale for chemical homogeneity and implications for chemical tagging in galactic archaeology.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based analysis of metal mixing during molecular cloud collapse, linking initial inhomogeneities to final stellar abundance correlations.
Findings
Stars formed within ~1 pc are chemically homogeneous.
Metal mixing reduces initial abundance scatter depending on initial scale.
Multiple elements are needed to distinguish star clusters in chemical space.
Abstract
Ongoing surveys are in the process of measuring the chemical abundances in large numbers of stars, with the ultimate goal of reconstructing the formation history of the Milky Way using abundances as tracers. However, interpretation of these data requires that we understand the relationship between stellar distributions in chemical and physical space, i.e., how similar in chemical abundance do we expect a pair of stars to be as a function of the distance between their formation sites. We investigate this question by simulating the gravitational collapse of a turbulent molecular cloud extracted from a galaxy-scale simulation, seeded with chemical inhomogeneities with different initial spatial scales. We follow the collapse from galactic scales down to resolutions scales of pc, and find that, during this process, turbulence mixes the metal patterns, reducing the abundance…
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