A novel look at energy equipartition in globular clusters

Bianchini, P, van de Ven, G, Norris, MA orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-7001-805X, Schinnerer, E and Varri, AL (2016) A novel look at energy equipartition in globular clusters. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 458 (4). pp. 3644-3654. ISSN 0035-8711

[thumbnail of 1603.00878v1.pdf]
Preview
PDF - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

1MB
[thumbnail of Plain Text Bibliography] Other (Plain Text Bibliography)
Restricted to Repository staff only

2kB

Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw552

Abstract

Two-body interactions play a major role in shaping the structural and dynamical properties of globular clusters (GCs) over their long-term evolution. In particular, GCs evolve toward a state of partial energy equipartition that induces a mass-dependence in their kinematics. By using a set of Monte Carlo cluster simulations evolved in quasi isolation, we show that the stellar mass dependence of the velocity dispersion σ(m) can be described by an exponential function σ 2 ∝ exp(−m/meq), with the parameter
meq quantifying the degree of partial energy equipartition of the systems. This simple parametrization successfully captures the behaviour of the velocity dispersion at lower as well as higher stellar masses, that is, the regime where the system is expected to approach full equipartition. We find a tight correlation between the degree if equipartition reached by a GC and its dynamical state, indicating that clusters that are more than about 20 core relaxation times old, have reached a maximum degree of equipartition. This equipartition−dynamical state relation can be used as a tool to characterize the relaxation condition of a cluster with a kinematic measure of the meq parameter. Vice versa, the mass-dependence of the kinematics can be predicted knowing the relaxation time solely on the basis of photometric measurements. Moreover, any deviations from this tight relation could be used as a probe of a peculiar dynamical history of a cluster. Finally, our novel approach is important for the interpretation of state-of-the-art Hubble Space Telescope proper motion data, for which the mass dependence of kinematics can now be measured, and for the application of modeling techniques which take into consideration multi-mass components and mass segregation.


Repository Staff Only: item control page