Stellar streams from black hole-rich star clusters
Daniel Roberts, Mark Gieles, Denis Erkal, Jason L. Sanders

TL;DR
This study uses advanced models to compare stellar streams from clusters with and without black holes, revealing significant differences in mass, density, and structure, aiding in understanding their origins.
Contribution
Introduces the QSG model for analyzing stream density profiles and quantifies how black hole-rich clusters produce distinct stellar streams.
Findings
Streams from black hole-rich clusters are about five times more massive.
These streams have density peaks closer to the cluster after 1 Gyr.
Streams from BH-rich clusters have narrower peaks and extended wings.
Abstract
Nearly a hundred progenitor-less, thin stellar streams have been discovered in the Milky Way, thanks to Gaia and related surveys. Most streams are believed to have formed from star clusters and it was recently proposed that extended star clusters -- rich in stellar-mass black holes (BHs) -- are efficient in creating streams. To understand the nature of stream progenitors better, we quantify the differences between streams originating from star clusters with and without BHs using direct -body models and a new model for the density profiles of streams based on time-dependent escape rates from clusters. The QSG (Quantifying Stream Growth) model facilitates the rapid exploration of parameter space and provides an analytic framework to understand the impact of different star cluster properties and escape conditions on the structure of streams. Using these models it is found that, compared…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
