The initial luminosity and mass functions of the Galactic open clusters
Abstract
(... abridged) The observed luminosity function can be constructed in a range of absolute integrated magnitudes IMV= [-10, -0.5] mag, i.e. about 5 magnitudes deeper than in the most nearby galaxies. It increases linearly from the brightest limit to a turnover at about IMV≈-2.5. The slope of this linear portion is a=0.410.01, which agrees perfectly with the slope deduced for star cluster observations in nearby galaxies. (...) We find that the initial mass function of open clusters (CIMF) has a two-segment structure with the slopes α=1.660.14 in the range Mc/M=3.37...4.93 and α=0.820.14 in the range Mc/M=1.7...3.37. The average mass of open clusters at birth is 4.5· 103 M, which should be compared to the average observed mass of about 700 M. The average cluster formation rate derived from the comparison of initial and observed mass functions is =0.4 kpc-2Myr-1. Multiplying by the age of the Galactic disc (T = 13 Gyr) the predicted surface density of Galactic disc field stars originating from dissolved open clusters amounts to 22 M pc-2 which is about 40% of the total surface density of the Galactic disc in the solar neighbourhood. Thus, we conclude that almost half of all field stars were born in open clusters, a much higher fraction than previously thought.