arXiv:1912.07294 [astro-ph.SR]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
Effects of close binary evolution on the main-sequence morphology of young star clusters
Chen Wang, Norbert Langer, Abel Schootemeijer, Norberto Castro, Sylvia Adscheid, Pablo Marchant, Ben Hastings
Published 2019-12-16Version 1
Star clusters are the building blocks of galaxies. They are composed of stars of nearly equal age and chemical composition, allowing us to use them as chronometers and as testbeds for gauging stellar evolution. It has become clear recently that massive stars are formed preferentially in close binaries, in which mass transfer will drastically change the evolution of the stars. This is expected to leave a significant imprint in the distribution of cluster stars in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. Our results, based on a dense model grid of more than 50 000 detailed binary evolution calculations, indeed show several distinct, coeval main-sequence components, most notably an extended main-sequence turn-off region, and a group of near-critically rotating stars that is spread over a large luminosity range on the red side of the classical main sequence. We comprehensively demonstrate the time evolution of the features in an animation, and we derive analytic expressions to describe these features. We find quantitative agreement with results based on recent photometric and spectroscopic observations. We conclude that while other factors may also be at play, binary evolution has a major impact on the main-sequence morphology of young star clusters.