The statistical properties of stars and their dependence on metallicity (article)
Bate, MR
Date: 10 January 2019
Journal
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP) / Royal Astronomical Society
Publisher DOI
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Abstract
We report the statistical properties of stars and brown dwarfs obtained from four radiation
hydrodynamical simulations of star cluster formation, the metallicities of which span a range
from 1/100 to 3 times the solar value. Unlike previous similar investigations of the effects
of metallicity on stellar properties, these new ...
We report the statistical properties of stars and brown dwarfs obtained from four radiation
hydrodynamical simulations of star cluster formation, the metallicities of which span a range
from 1/100 to 3 times the solar value. Unlike previous similar investigations of the effects
of metallicity on stellar properties, these new calculations treat dust and gas temperatures
separately and include a thermochemical model of the diffuse interstellar medium.
The more advanced treatment of the interstellar medium gives rise to very different gas
and dust temperature distributions in the four calculations, with lower metallicities generally
resulting in higher temperatures and a delay in the onset of star formation. Despite this, once
star formation begins, all four calculations produce stars at similar rates and many of the
statistical properties of their stellar populations are difficult to distinguish from each other and
from those of observed stellar systems. We do find, however, that the greater cooling rates at
high gas densities due to the lower opacities at low metallicities increase the fragmentation on
small spatial scales (disc, filament, and core fragmentation). This produces an anti-correlation
between the close binary fraction of low-mass stars and metallicity similar to that which is
observed, and an increase in the fraction of protostellar mergers at low metallicities. There are
also indications that at lower metallicity close binaries may have lower mass ratios and the
abundance of brown dwarfs to stars may increase slightly. However, these latter two effects
are quite weak and need to be confirmed with larger samples.
Physics and Astronomy
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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