From the molecular-cloud- to the embedded-cluster-mass function with a density threshold for star formation
Abstract
The mass function of molecular clouds and clumps is shallower than the mass function of young star clusters, gas-embedded and gas-free alike, as their respective mass function indices are β0 1.7 and β 2. We demonstrate that such a difference can arise from different mass-radius relations for the embedded-clusters and the molecular clouds (clumps) hosting them. In particular, the formation of star clusters with a constant mean volume density in the central regions of molecular clouds of constant mean surface density steepens the mass function from clouds to embedded-clusters. This model is observationally supported since the mean surface density of molecular clouds is approximately constant, while there is a growing body of evidence, in both Galactic and extragalactic environments, that efficient star-formation requires a hydrogen molecule number density threshold of nth 104-5\,cm-3. In the framework of the same model, the radius distribution steepens from clouds (clumps) to embedded-clusters, which contributes to explaining observed cluster radius distributions. [Abridged]
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.