The initial luminosity and mass functions of the Galactic open clusters

We aim at the construction of luminosity and mass functions for Galactic open clusters, based on integrated magnitudes and tidal masses. We also aim at studying the evolution of these functions, with the ultimate purpose of deriving the initial luminosity and mass distributions of star clusters, ind...

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Veröffentlicht in:Astronomy and astrophysics (Berlin) 2008-08, Vol.487 (2), p.557-566
Hauptverfasser: Piskunov, A. E., Kharchenko, N. V., Schilbach, E., Röser, S., Scholz, R.-D., Zinnecker, H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We aim at the construction of luminosity and mass functions for Galactic open clusters, based on integrated magnitudes and tidal masses. We also aim at studying the evolution of these functions, with the ultimate purpose of deriving the initial luminosity and mass distributions of star clusters, independent of model assumptions regarding the cluster mass-to-light ratio. Finally we aim at a new determination of the percentage of field stars that have originated in open clusters.
The integrated magnitudes are computed from individual photometry of cluster members selected from the ASCC-2.5catalogue. The cluster masses we assumed to be the estimated tidal mass recently published by us elsewhere. Analysis of the cluster brightness distribution as a function of apparent integrated magnitudes shows that the cluster sample drawn from the ASCC-2.5is complete down to apparent integrated magnitude IV = 8, with 440 clusters and compact associations above this completeness limit. This, on average, corresponds to a completeness area in the solar neighbourhood with an effective radius of about 1 kpc.
The observed luminosity function can be constructed in a range of absolute integrated magnitudes $I_{M_V}= [-10,\,-0.5]$ mag, i.e. about 5 mag deeper than in the most nearby galaxies. It increases linearly from the brightest limit to a turnover at about $I_{M_V}\approx-2.5$. The slope of this linear portion is $a=0.41\pm0.01$, which agrees perfectly with the slope deduced for star cluster observations in nearby galaxies. The masses of the Galactic clusters span a range from a few $M_\odot$ to $\log M_{\rm c}/M_\odot \approx 5.5$. The mass function of these clusters can be fit as a linear function with log mass for $\log M_{\rm c}/M_\odot > 2.5$, and shows a broad maximum between $\log M_{\rm c}/M_\odot=1.5$ and 2.5. For $\log M_{\rm c}/M_\odot >2.5$, the linear part of the upper cluster mass function has a slope $\alpha=2.03\pm0.05$, again in agreement with data on extragalactic clusters. We regard this agreement as indirect evidence that the tidal masses for Galactic clusters and the luminosity-based masses for extragalactic clusters are on the same scale.
Considering the evolution of the cluster mass function now reveals a slight but significant steepening of the slope with increasing age from $\alpha=1.66\pm0.14$ at $\log t\leq 6.9$ to $\alpha=2.13\pm0.08$ at $\log t\leq 8.5$. This indicates that open clusters are formed with a flatter (initial) mass distribution than th
ISSN:0004-6361
1432-0746
DOI:10.1051/0004-6361:200809505