1 / 23

Population of dynamically formed triples in dense stellar systems

Population of dynamically formed triples in dense stellar systems. Natalia Ivanova Fred Rasio, Vicky Kalogera, John Fregeau, Laura Blecha, Ryan O'Leary (Northwestern) Chris Belczynski (New Mexico) Jamie Lombardi and Zach Proulx (Vassar College)

hans
Télécharger la présentation

Population of dynamically formed triples in dense stellar systems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Population of dynamically formed triples in dense stellar systems • Natalia Ivanova • Fred Rasio, Vicky Kalogera, John Fregeau, Laura Blecha, Ryan O'Leary (Northwestern) • Chris Belczynski (New Mexico) • Jamie Lombardi and Zach Proulx (Vassar College) • ESO workshop on Multiple Stars across the H-R Diagram • July 2005

  2. Outline • Method • Binaries population • Triples: formation rates & their population • Effect on the cluster population

  3. Population synthesis with dynamics • Static cluster background core density nc dispersion velocity  escape velocity vesc • Mass segregation (Fregeau et al. 2004) tsc(m)  <m>/m trh • Recoil “+” : large populations, up to 106 stars “-” : cluster dynamics is not self-consistent Ivanova, Belczynski, Fregeau & Rasio 2005

  4. Encounters • SS encounters • Mergers in physical collisions • binary formation in physical collisions (new SPH code using “realistic” RG structure) (Lombardi et al. 2005) • TC-binary formations ( Portegies Zwart & Meinen 1993) • BS & BB encountersusing FewBody (Fregeau et al.2004) • exchanges • ionizations • (multiple) physical collisions • triples formation

  5. Stellar evolution • Single stars: analytic fits provided by Hurley et al. 2000 • Binary stars: (Belczysnki et al. 2002, 2005) • Magnetic braking • Mass transfer events • Common envelope events • Tidal circularization and synchronization • Accretion on WDs, Ia SN and subCh Ia • Triples: no evolutionary treatment yet

  6. “Typical” cluster model • 250,000 M, modeled with 1,25106 stars, 100% binaries initial • IMF for primaries from 0.05M to 100M(triple power law by Kroupa 2002); Z=0.001 • Binaries • Flat mass ratio distribution • Periods from 0.1 d to 107 days • Thermal e distribution • Core characteristics: • nc=105 per pc3 • 1 = 10 km/s • trh=109 yr

  7. Basics of the binary dynamics • Collision time coll: time between two successful collisions, coll= 1/ncS • Hardness : ratio between binary binding energy and kinetic energy of an average object • Soft binaries <1: get softer; very likely to be destroyed through ionization • Hard binaries >1: get harder; the encounter can result in the exchange of the companion (smaller mass component is replaced by more massive intruder)

  8. Binaries destruction: role of the evolution Destructions of only soft binaries (~60% of primordial binaries) & evolutionary destructions: Upper limit 30% if <m>  0.5 M 24% if <m>  1 M 50% of all hard binaries will undergo an encounter in 10Gyr, about half of them will be destroyed Only 22% of binaries will be left, and among binaries with a primary companion > 0.5 M  only 13%

  9. Binaries periods “Typical” GC, at 10 Gyr 6200 MS-MS binaries in the core, 1600 binaries with a WD 7800 binaries in the core

  10. Triples: formation rates Stability criterionas in Mardling & Aarseth (2001) Formation ratesa typical cluster has about 5000 hier. stable triples formed throughout its evolution Ntr/Nbin 0.05 fb <mb> <a> per Gyr At 10 Gyr : <mb>1.0M, <a>10R, fb10% Ntr/Nbin  5% per Gyr Ntr  600/t91/3 per Gyr, at ages > 1 Gyr

  11. Triples: masses

  12. Triples: periods

  13. Triples: eccentricities

  14. Triples: hardness 45% with  > 1kt and only 7% with  > 10kt ~half of hard triples have small mass outer companion

  15. Triples and Kozai mechanism Kozai mechanism causes large variations in the eccentricity and inclination of the stars orbits and could drive the inner binary of the triple system to merge before next interaction with other stars. Kozai time-scale koz as in Innanen et al. (1997) 2 runs with completely the same initial population of 5105 stars, in one run inner binaries in the formed triples are merged if tid < koz < coll (tid as in Hut 1981 & 1982)

  16. Triples: hardness and Kozai 1/3 of all triples - Kozai systems

  17. Triples: Kozai & MS-MS inner binaries 73% of all triples have MS-MS inner binary, 30% of them are Kozai binary. Overall can provide ~10% of all BSs.

  18. Triples: Kozai & inner binaries with a compact companion 23% of all triples have inner binary with a CO (8% -two CO), 40% of them are Kozai binary. If Kozai binaries merge, the number of CVs (observed at 10Gyr) is reduced by 1/3.

  19. Effect on binary periods

  20. Binaries vs triples (at 10 Gyr) Core binaries Inner binaries in triples Outer star

  21. Conclusions • Hierarchically stable triples are formed at the rate of about 600/t91/3. 5000 triples are formed throughout entire evolution in a typical cluster • 1/2 are short lived soft triples, 1/4 are hard and stable with respect to further encounters and 1/4 are hard and will possibly undergo an exchange interaction if one occures • 75% of them have MS-MS inner binary and in 25% of them the inner binary containing a compact object • A “typical” triple: M3/(M1+M2)0.6, M1+M21.2M, Pin1 day, Pout/Pin 1000, ain/aout  100, eout  0.8, 1 kT • An inner binary of a triple is more likely to contain a compact object than a core binary. Outer star follows the binaries population. • 1/3 of all triples are affected by Kozai mechanism • A typical BS - product of Kozai-induced merger - is 1.1 M, could provide 10% of all BSs • A typical WD-MS binary merged due to Kozai-induced merger contains 0.8M WD and 0.8M MS. Number of CVs is reduced by 1/3

  22. Binaries destruction Field “core only”

  23. Binaries destruction

More Related