The currently observed clumps cannot be the "direct" precursors of the currently observed open clusters
J. W. Zhou, Sami Dib, Pavel Kroupa

TL;DR
The paper argues that current observed molecular clumps are unlikely to be the direct precursors of the open clusters we observe today, suggesting alternative formation scenarios or past conditions.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of clumps, embedded clusters, and open clusters, highlighting the mismatch in properties and proposing alternative origins for open clusters.
Findings
Open clusters are larger and more massive than embedded clusters and clumps.
Current clumps lack sufficient mass to directly form observed old, massive open clusters.
Post-gas expulsion coalescence of embedded clusters is a plausible formation scenario.
Abstract
We categorized clumps, embedded clusters, and open clusters and conducted a comparative analysis of their physical properties. Overall, the radii of open clusters are significantly larger than those of embedded clusters and clumps. The radii of embedded clusters are larger than those of clumps, which may be due to the expansion of embedded clusters. The open clusters have significantly higher masses than embedded clusters, by about one order of magnitude. Given the current mass distribution of clumps in the Milky Way, the evolutionary sequence from a single clump evolving into an embedded cluster and subsequently into an open cluster cannot account for the observed open clusters with old ages and high masses, which is also supported by N-body simulations of individual embedded clusters. To explain the mass and radius distributions of the observed open clusters, initial embedded clusters…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeological and Geophysical Studies Worldwide
