Binary Star Evolution in Different Environments: Filamentary, Fractal, Halo and Tidal-tail Clusters
Xiaoying Pang (1, 2), Yifan Wang (1), Shih-Yun Tang (3, 4),, Yicheng Rui (5, 6), Jing Bai (1), Chengyuan Li (7 ans 8), Fabo Feng (5 and, 6), M.B.N. Kouwenhoven (1), Wen-Ping Chen (9), and Rwei-ju Chuang (10) ((1), Department of Physics, Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University

TL;DR
This study investigates how binary star fractions vary across different cluster environments and ages using Gaia DR3 data, revealing environmental and evolutionary influences on binary star disruption.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of binary fractions in various cluster types, highlighting the impact of environment and age on binary star survival and distribution.
Findings
Binary fraction decreases with cluster age.
Higher binary fractions are found in low-density environments.
Binary disruption is evident early in cluster evolution.
Abstract
Using membership of 85 open clusters from previous studies (Pang et al. 2021a,b, 2022b; Li et al. 2021) based on Gaia DR3 data, we identify binary candidates in the color-magnitude diagram, for systems with mass ratio q > 0.4. The binary fraction is corrected for incompleteness at different distances due to the Gaia angular resolution limit. We find a decreasing binary fraction with increasing cluster age, with substantial scatter. For clusters with a total mass > 200, the binary fraction is independent of cluster mass. The binary fraction depends strongly on stellar density. Among four types of cluster environments, the lowest-density filamentary and fractal stellar groups have the highest mean binary fraction: 23.6% and 23.2%, respectively. The mean binary fraction in tidal-tail clusters is 20.8%, and is lowest in the densest halo-type clusters: 14.8%. We find clear evidence…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
