Effects of the environment on the multiplicity properties of stars in the STARFORGE simulations

Most observed stars are part of a multiple star system, but the formation of such systems and the role of environment and various physical processes is still poorly understood. We present a suite of radiation-magnetohydrodynamic simulations of star-forming molecular clouds from the STARFORGE project...

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Veröffentlicht in:Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 2023-01, Vol.518 (3), p.4693-4712
Hauptverfasser: Guszejnov, Dávid, Raju, Aman N, Offner, Stella S R, Grudić, Michael Y, Faucher-Giguère, Claude-André, Hopkins, Philip F, Rosen, Anna L
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 4693
container_title Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
container_volume 518
creator Guszejnov, Dávid
Raju, Aman N
Offner, Stella S R
Grudić, Michael Y
Faucher-Giguère, Claude-André
Hopkins, Philip F
Rosen, Anna L
description Most observed stars are part of a multiple star system, but the formation of such systems and the role of environment and various physical processes is still poorly understood. We present a suite of radiation-magnetohydrodynamic simulations of star-forming molecular clouds from the STARFORGE project that include stellar feedback with varied initial surface density, magnetic fields, level of turbulence, metallicity, interstellar radiation field, simulation geometry and turbulent driving. In our fiducial cloud, the raw simulation data reproduces the observed multiplicity fractions for Solar-type and higher mass stars, similar to previous works. However, after correcting for observational incompleteness the simulation underpredicts these values. The discrepancy is likely due to the lack of disc fragmentation, as the simulation only resolves multiples that form either through capture or core fragmentation. The raw mass distribution of companions is consistent with randomly drawing from the initial mass function for the companions of $\gt 1\, \mathrm{M}_{\rm \odot }$ stars. However, accounting for observational incompleteness produces a flatter distribution similar to observations. We show that stellar multiplicity changes as the cloud evolves and anticorrelates with stellar density. This relationship also explains most multiplicity variations between runs, i.e. variations in the initial conditions that increase stellar density (increased surface density, reduced turbulence) also act to decrease multiplicity. While other parameters, such as metallicity, interstellar radiation, and geometry significantly affect the star formation history or the IMF, varying them produces no clear trend in stellar multiplicity properties.
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title Effects of the environment on the multiplicity properties of stars in the STARFORGE simulations
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