Luminosity profiles of resolved young massive clusters
2004
FORMATION AND EVOLUTION OF MASSIVE YOUNG STAR CLUSTERS
Young massive clusters differ markedly from old globular clusters in featuring extended, rather than tidally truncated, envelopes. Their projected-luminosity profiles are well fit by Elson-Fall-Freeman models with core radii 0.3 pc, r <= 8 pc and power-law envelopes of negative exponent 2.0 <= gamma <= 3.8. These envelopes form within the first few 10(6) yr and last similar to 10(8) -10(9.5) yr, depending on the environment. Many YMCs show clumpy substructure that may accelerate their initial relaxation. The cores of Magellanic-Cloud clusters show universal expansion from r(c) < 1 pc at birth to r(c) = 2 - 3 pc after 10(8) yr, but then seem to evolve along two bifurcating branches in a r, - log(age) diagram. The lower branch can be explained by mass-loss driven core expansion during the first 109 yr, followed by slow core contraction and the onset of core collapse due to evaporation. The upper branch, which shows continued core expansion proportional to logarithmic age, remains unexplained. There is strong evidence for rapid mass segregation in young clusters, yet little evidence for top-heavy IMFs or primordial mass segregation. Finally, YMCs show similar structure throughout the Local Group and as far away as we can resolve them (<= 20 Mpc).