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      Protostellar Feedback in Turbulent Fragmentation: Consequences for Stellar Clustering and Multiplicity

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          Abstract

          Stars are strongly clustered on both large (~pc) and small (~binary) scales, but there are few analytic or even semi-analytic theories for the correlation function and multiplicity of stars. In this paper we present such a theory, based on our recently-developed semi-analytic model of gravito-turbulent fragmentation, including the suppression of fragmentation by protostellar radiation feedback. We compare the results including feedback to a control model in which it is omitted. We show that both classes of models robustly reproduce the stellar correlation function at >0.01 pc scales, which is well approximated by a power-law that follows generally from scale-free physics (turbulence plus gravity) on large scales. On smaller scales protostellar disk fragmentation becomes dominant over common core fragmentation, leading to a steepening of the correlation function. Multiplicity is more sensitive to feedback, with the protostellar heating model reproducing the observed multiplicity fractions and mass ratio distributions for both Solar and sub-Solar mass stars, in particular the brown dwarf desert, but a model without feedback failing to do so. The model with feedback also produces an at-formation period distribution consistent with the one inferred from observations. However, it is unable to produce short-range binaries below the length scale of protostellar disks. We suggest that such close binaries are produced primarily by disk fragmentation.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          2016-10-03
          Article
          1610.00772
          e684c998-c904-4ab6-bb3e-e0897c9e15c6

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          15 pages, 12 figures, submitted to MNRAS
          astro-ph.GA astro-ph.SR

          Galaxy astrophysics,Solar & Stellar astrophysics
          Galaxy astrophysics, Solar & Stellar astrophysics

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