The Dependence of the Hierarchical Distribution of Star Clusters on Galactic Environment
Shyam H. Menon, Kathryn Grasha, Bruce G. Elmegreen, Christoph, Federrath, Mark R. Krumholz, Daniela Calzetti, N\'estor S\'anchez, Sean T., Linden, Angela Adamo, Matteo Messa, David O. Cook, Daniel A. Dale, Eva K., Grebel, Michele Fumagalli, Elena Sabbi, Kelsey E. Johnson

TL;DR
This study uses the Two Point Correlation Function to analyze how the spatial distribution of young star clusters varies with galaxy environment and age, revealing a hierarchical, fractal pattern that evolves over time.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how galaxy properties influence the hierarchical and fractal distribution of star clusters and how this structure changes with cluster age.
Findings
Young clusters exhibit fractal, power-law distributions.
Correlation length and fractal dimension vary with galaxy properties.
Hierarchical structuring diminishes with cluster age, converging to randomness around 100 Myr.
Abstract
We use the angular Two Point Correlation Function (TPCF) to investigate the hierarchical distribution of young star clusters in 12 local (3--18 Mpc) star-forming galaxies using star cluster catalogues obtained with the \textit{Hubble Space Telescope} (\textit{HST}) as part of the Treasury Program LEGUS (Legacy ExtraGalactic UV Survey). The sample spans a range of different morphological types, allowing us to infer how the physical properties of the galaxy affect the spatial distribution of the clusters. We also prepare a range of physically motivated toy models to compare with and interpret the observed features in the TPCFs. We find that, conforming to earlier studies, young clusters () have power-law TPCFs that are characteristic of fractal distributions with a fractal dimension , and this scale-free nature extends out to a maximum scale…
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