Global survey of star clusters in the Milky Way VI. Age distribution and cluster formation history

The all-sky Milky Way Star Clusters (MWSC) survey provides uniform and precise ages and other parameters for a variety of clusters in the Solar Neighbourhood. We construct the cluster age distribution, investigate its spatial variations, and discuss constraints on cluster formation scenarios of the...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2018-02
Hauptverfasser: Piskunov, A E, Just, A, Kharchenko, N V, Berczik, P, R -D Scholz, Reffert, S, Yen, S X
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The all-sky Milky Way Star Clusters (MWSC) survey provides uniform and precise ages and other parameters for a variety of clusters in the Solar Neighbourhood. We construct the cluster age distribution, investigate its spatial variations, and discuss constraints on cluster formation scenarios of the Galactic disk during the last 5 Gyrs. Due to the spatial extent of the MWSC, we consider spatial variations of the age distribution along galactocentric radius \(R_G\), and along \(Z\)-axis. For the analysis of the age distribution we use 2242 clusters, which all lie within roughly 2.5 kpc of the Sun. To connect the observed age distribution to the cluster formation history we build an analytical model based on simple assumptions on the cluster initial mass function and on the cluster mass-lifetime relation, fit it to the observations, and determine the parameters of the cluster formation law. Comparison with the literature shows that earlier results strongly underestimated the number of evolved clusters with ages \(t\gtrsim 100\) Myr. Recent studies based on all-sky catalogues agree better with our data, but still lack the oldest clusters with ages \(t\gtrsim 1\) Gyr. We do not observe a strong variation in the age distribution along \(R_G\), though we find an enhanced fraction of older clusters (\(t>1\) Gyr) in the inner disk. In contrast, the distribution strongly varies along \(Z\). The high altitude distribution practically does not contain clusters with \(t
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1802.06779