Nitrogen-enriched, highly-pressurized nebular clouds surrounding a super star cluster at cosmic noon
Massimo Pascale, Liang Dai, Christopher F. McKee, Benny T.-H. Tsang

TL;DR
This study investigates a young, massive super star cluster at cosmic noon, revealing highly pressurized, nitrogen-enriched nebular clouds surrounding it, with implications for star formation and globular cluster evolution.
Contribution
It provides a detailed physical model of a super star cluster and its surrounding nebula, highlighting high-pressure clouds and nitrogen enrichment, a novel insight into early cluster environments.
Findings
Cluster is less than 4 Myr old and extremely massive (~10^7 solar masses)
Surrounding clouds are highly pressurized (~10^9 K cm^-3) and contain significant neutral hydrogen
Detected nitrogen enrichment suggests retention of ejecta from massive stars
Abstract
Strong lensing offers a precious opportunity for studying the formation and early evolution of super star clusters that are rare in our cosmic backyard. The Sunburst Arc, a lensed Cosmic Noon galaxy, hosts a young super star cluster with escaping Lyman continuum radiation. Analyzing archival HST images and emission line data from VLT/MUSE and X-shooter, we construct a physical model for the cluster and its surrounding photoionized nebula. We confirm that the cluster is Myr old, is extremely massive and yet has a central component as compact as several parsecs, and we find a gas-phase metallicity . The cluster is surrounded by of dense clouds that have been pressurized to by perhaps stellar radiation at within ten parsecs. These should have large neutral…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
