The dynamical properties of stellar systems in the Galactic disc
Abstract
We postulate that stars in the Galactic field are born in aggregates of binary stars with half-mass radii R_0.5 and number of binaries N_bin which are dynamically equivalent to the dominant-mode cluster (N_bin, R_0.5)~=(200, 0.8 pc). Binary orbits are distributed according to an initial period distribution, which is consistent with pre-main-sequence data. Stellar masses are paired at random from the KTG(1.3) mass function. We develop a simple model for the redistribution or orbital angular momentum and energy in short-period protobinary systems (pre-main-sequence eigenevolution), which establishes the observed correlations between eccentricity, mass ratio and period. The evolution of orbital parameters owing to perturbations by neighbouring systems (stimulated evolution) within the dominant-mode cluster places 1-2 per cent of all orbits into the eigenvolution region (<e1>P<</e1>100 d, <e1>e<~</e1>0.1 approximately) of the eccentricity-period diagram. The number of such forbidden orbits at any time is a function of the stellar number density, the dynamical and the nuclear age of the cluster. Observations of binaries in clusters should reveal the odd binary with forbidden orbital parameters. Examples of such systems may be the pre-main-sequence binaries P2486 and EK Cep, and binaries in stellar clusters with eccentric orbits at periods smaller than the circularization cut-off period. Eigenevolution is expected to depopulate the eigenevolution region within 10^5 yr for pre-main-sequence binaries, but main-sequence binaries with forbidden orbits should remain in the eigenevolution region for times of order 10^9 yr. We show that the binary star population must have a birth eccentricity distribution that is approximately dynamically relaxed because stimulated evolution in the dominant-mode cluster cannot sufficiently thermalize a significantly different distribution. After disintegration of the dominant-mode cluster we have a population of Galactic field systems with orbital parameters as observed, with a surviving proportion of binaries of f_tot=0.48+/-0.03 which compares favourably with the observed proportion f^obstot=0.47+/-0.05. The rise of the period distribution to a maximum at log_10P~=4.8 reflects approximately the initial distribution, whereas the decay for log_10<e1>P<~</e1>4.8 results from stimulated evolution. The mass-ratio distribution of G dwarf binaries is depleted at small mass ratios, and has the shape of the main-sequence distribution, despite initially being the KTG(1.3) mass function. We predict and tabulate the mass-ratio distribution for main-sequence binaries with a primary star less massive than 1.1 M_solar. Our model Galactic field stellar population has a binary proportion among G, K and M dwarfs in good agreement with the observational data. Too few triple and quadruple systems form by capture to account for the number of observed systems. An example of a triple system that may have formed by capture in the birth aggregate may be Proxima Cen-alpha Cen A/B. We compare the specific angular momentum distribution of our initial binary star population with the observed distribution of specific angular momenta of molecular cloud cores. According to our model about 40 per cent of all late-type stars are single after cluster dissolution, but had companions with log_10P>~6 at birth. These stars are expected to have circumstellar discs (and possible planetary systems) extending to at least about 40 au.
- Publication:
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Pub Date:
- December 1995
- DOI:
- 10.1093/mnras/277.4.1507
- arXiv:
- arXiv:astro-ph/9508084
- Bibcode:
- 1995MNRAS.277.1507K
- Keywords:
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- Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- MNRAS (in press), 18 pages, plain TeX, figures available via FAX or air-mail