19–23 Aug 2024
Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center, Warsaw, Poland
Europe/Warsaw timezone

Impact of Radiation Feedback on the Formation of Globular Cluster Candidates during Cloud-Cloud Collisions

19 Aug 2024, 10:10
20m
Main Lecture Hall (Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center, Warsaw, Poland)

Main Lecture Hall

Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center, Warsaw, Poland

Bartycka 18, 00-716 Warsaw Poland
Talk Formation of dense stellar systems across cosmic time Formation of dense stellar systems across cosmic time

Speaker

Daniel Han (Yonsei University)

Description

To understand the impact of radiation feedback during the formation of a globular cluster (GC), we simulate a head-on collision of two turbulent giant molecular clouds (GMCs). A series of idealized radiation-hydrodynamic simulations is performed, with and without stellar radiation or Type II supernovae. We find that a gravitationally bound, compact star cluster of mass $M_{GC} \sim 10^5 M_{\odot}$ forms within $\approx$ 3 Myr when two GMCs with mass $M_{GMC} = 3.6 \times 10^5 M_{\odot}$ collide. The GC candidate does not form during a single collapsing event but emerges due to the mergers of local dense gas clumps and gas accretion. The momentum transfer due to the absorption of the ionizing radiation is the dominant feedback process that suppresses the gas collapse, and photoionization becomes efficient once a sufficient number of stars form. The cluster mass is larger by a factor of ~2 when the radiation feedback is neglected, and the difference is slightly more pronounced (16%) when extreme Ly$\alpha$ feedback is considered in the fiducial run. In the simulations with radiation feedback, supernovae explode after the star-forming clouds are dispersed, and their metal ejecta are not instantaneously recycled to form stars.

Affliation Yonsei University
Current Position PhD Student

Primary author

Daniel Han (Yonsei University)

Co-authors

Prof. Taysun Kimm (Yonsei University) Dr Harley Katz (University of Oxford) Prof. Julien Devriendt (University of Oxford) Prof. Adrianne Slyz (University of Oxford)

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