The formation, evolution and disruption of star clusters with improved gravitational dynamics in simulated dwarf galaxies
Natalia Lah\'en, Antti Rantala, Thorsten Naab, Christian Partmann,, Peter H. Johansson, Jessica May Hislop

TL;DR
This study introduces advanced star-by-star galaxy simulations incorporating detailed gravitational interactions, hydrodynamics, and stellar evolution, leading to more realistic modeling of star cluster formation, evolution, and disruption in dwarf galaxies.
Contribution
It presents the first star-by-star galaxy models with improved gravitational dynamics that accurately simulate star cluster life cycles in dwarf galaxies.
Findings
Clusters up to 900 M$_ ext{sun}$ form compactly and expand over time.
63% of clusters disrupt within 100 Myr in tidal fields.
Collisional dynamics reduce supernovae in bound clusters by ~1.7 times.
Abstract
So far, even the highest resolution galaxy formation simulations with gravitational softening have failed to reproduce realistic life cycles of star clusters. We present the first star-by-star galaxy models of star cluster formation to account for hydrodynamics, star formation, stellar evolution and collisional gravitational interactions between stars and compact remnants using the updated SPHGAL+KETJU code, part of the GRIFFIN-project. Gravitational dynamics in the vicinity of M stars and their remnants are solved with a regularised integrator (KETJU) without gravitational softening. Comparisons of idealised star cluster evolution with SPHGAL+KETJU and direct N-body show broad agreement and the failure of simulations that use gravitational softening. In the hydrodynamical simulations of idealised dwarf galaxies run with SPHGAL+KETJU, clusters up to M form…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
