Constraints on Star Formation from the Close Packing of Protostars in Clusters
Authors
B.G. Elmegreen 1, Mohsen Shadmehri 2
Affiliation
1 IBM Research Division, T.J. Watson Research Center, P.O. Box 218, Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA, 2 Department of Physics, School of Science, Ferdowsi University, Mashhad, Iran
Accepted by
MNRAS
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Abstract
The mm-wave continuum sources (MCS) in Ophiuchus
have mutual collision rates less than their collapse rates by a
factor of 10 to 100, suggesting most will form stars without
further interactions. However, the ratio of these rates would
have exceeded unity in the past if they were only 2.5 times
larger than they are now. Such a high previous ratio suggests
three possible scenarios: (1) the MCS contracted from lower
densities and acquired their present masses through collisional
agglomeration, (2) they contracted independently from lower
densities elsewhere and moved to the cluster core recently, or (3)
they grew from smaller sizes at a constant high density. The third
of these is most likely, implying that the MCS formed in the
shocked regions of a supersonically turbulent fluid. The first
scenario gives the wrong mass function and the second does not
give the observed hierarchical clustering. The ratio of rates also
exceeds unity today if the MCS have envelopes with smooth profiles
that end in pressure balance with the ambient cloud cores; this
suggests again that turbulent flows define their outer
layers. Proximity constraints like this are even more important in
massive clusters, including globular clusters, in which massive
stars with the same or greater space density are more strongly
interacting than the Ophiuchus MCS. As a result, the density
contrast for MCS must be larger in massive clusters than it is in
Ophiuchus or else significant
coalescence will occur in the protostellar phase, possible forming
massive black holes. A proportionality to the second power of the Mach
number allows the MCS cores to collapse independently. These
results suggest that stars in dense clusters generally form on a
dynamical time by the continuous collection and rapid collapse of
turbulence-shocked gas. Implications of proximity constraints on
the initial stellar mass function are also discussed. Warm cloud cores can
produce a top-heavy IMF because of a simultaneous increase in the thermal
Jeans mass and the collisional destruction rate of low mass MCS.