Evolution of the disky second generation of stars in globular clusters on cosmological timescale
Peter Berczik, Taras Panamarev, Maryna Ishchenko, Bence Kocsis

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological N-body simulations to explore how second-generation stars in globular clusters evolve over billions of years within a dynamic Galactic environment, affecting their structure and rotation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation approach combining cosmological galaxy evolution with detailed cluster modeling to study second-generation star dynamics in GCs.
Findings
Mass loss depends on orbital parameters, with tighter orbits causing more loss.
The Galactic growth leads to tighter orbits and less mass loss.
Rotational signatures of second-generation stars can persist or vanish depending on the orbit.
Abstract
Context. Many Milky Way globular clusters (GCs) host multiple stellar populations, challenging the traditional view of GCs as single-population systems. It has been suggested that second-generation stars could form in a disk from gas lost by first-generation stars or from external accreted gas. Aims. We investigate how the introduction of a second stellar generation affects mass loss, internal mixing, and rotational properties of GCs in a time-varying Galactic tidal field and different orbital configurations. Methods. We conducted direct N-body simulations of GCs on three types of orbits derived from the observed Milky Way GCs. We evolved the clusters for 8 Gyr in the time-varying Galactic potential of the IllustrisTNG-100 cosmological simulation. After 2 Gyr, we introduced a second stellar generation, comprising 5% of the initial mass of the first generation, as a flattened disk of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
