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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2016-02-25
    Description: We follow the dynamical evolution of young star-forming regions with a wide range of initial conditions and examine how the radial velocity dispersion, , evolves over time. We compare this velocity dispersion to the theoretically expected value for the velocity dispersion if a region were in virial equilibrium, vir and thus assess the virial state (/ vir ) of these systems. We find that in regions that are initially subvirial, or in global virial equilibrium but subvirial on local scales, the system relaxes to virial equilibrium within several million years, or roughly 25–50 crossing times, according to the measured virial ratio. However, the measured velocity dispersion, , appears to be a bad diagnostic of the current virial state of these systems as it suggests that they become supervirial when compared to the velocity dispersion estimated from the virial mass, vir . We suggest that this discrepancy is caused by the fact that the regions are never fully relaxed, and that the early non-equilibrium evolution is imprinted in the one-dimensional velocity dispersion at these early epochs. If measured early enough (〈2 Myr in our simulations, or ~20 crossing times), the velocity dispersion can be used to determine whether a region was highly supervirial at birth without the risk of degeneracy. We show that combining , or the ratio of to the interquartile range (IQR) dispersion, with measures of spatial structure, places stronger constraints on the dynamical history of a region than using the velocity dispersion in isolation.
    Print ISSN: 0035-8711
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-2966
    Topics: Physics
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2014-01-16
    Description: We model the dynamical evolution of star-forming regions with a wide range of initial properties. We follow the evolution of the regions’ substructure using the $\mathcal {Q}$ -parameter, we search for dynamical mass segregation using the MSR technique, and we also quantify the evolution of local density around stars as a function of mass using the LDR method. The amount of dynamical mass segregation measured by MSR is generally only significant for subvirial and virialized, substructured regions – which usually evolve to form bound clusters. The LDR method shows that massive stars attain higher local densities than the median value in all regions, even those that are supervirial and evolve to form (unbound) associations. We also introduce the $\mathcal {Q} - \Sigma _{\rm LDR}$ plot, which describes the evolution of spatial structure as a function of mass-weighted local density in a star-forming region. Initially dense (〉1000 stars pc –2 ), bound regions always have $\mathcal {Q} 〉 1, \Sigma _{\rm LDR} 〉 2$ after 5 Myr, whereas dense unbound regions always have $\mathcal {Q} 〈 1, \Sigma _{\rm LDR} 〉 2$ after 5 Myr. Less dense regions (〈100 stars pc –2 ) do not usually exhibit LDR 〉 2 values, and if relatively high local density around massive stars arises purely from dynamics, then the $\mathcal {Q} - \Sigma _{\rm LDR}$ plot can be used to estimate the initial density of a star-forming region.
    Print ISSN: 0035-8711
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-2966
    Topics: Physics
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