The long-term evolution of main-sequence binaries in DRAGON simulations
Qi Shu, Xiaoying Pang, Francesco Flammini Dotti, M.B.N. Kouwenhoven,, Manuel Arca Sedda, Rainer Spurzem

TL;DR
This study uses large-scale N-body simulations to analyze the long-term evolution of main-sequence binaries in globular clusters, revealing how initial conditions influence binary properties and distributions over 12 billion years.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of binary orbital evolution in one-million particle globular cluster simulations, highlighting effects of initial mass functions and distributions.
Findings
Mass ratio of binaries increases over time due to stellar evolution.
Dynamical binaries have higher eccentricities and larger semi-major axes.
Binary fraction decreases outward and shows mass segregation after 12 Gyr.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive investigation of main-sequence (MS) binaries in the DRAGON simulations, which are the first one-million particles direct -body simulations of globular clusters. We analyse the orbital parameters of the binary samples in two of the DRAGON simulations, D1-R7- IMF93 and D2-R7-IMF01, focusing on their secular evolution and correlations up to 12 Gyr. These two models have different initial stellar mass functions: Kroupa 1993 (D1-R7-IMF93) and Kroupa 2001 (D2-R7-IMF01); and different initial mass ratio distributions: random paring (D1-R7-IMF93) and a power-law (D1-R7-IMF93). In general, the mass ratio of a population of binaries increases over time due to stellar evolution, which is less significant in D2-R7-IMF01. In D1-R7-IMF93, primordial binaries with mass ratio 0.2 are most common, and the frequency linearly declines with increasing at all…
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