Abstract
The formation of globular clusters is still an unsolved problem. Though most scenarios assume a massive molecular cloud as the progenitor, it is unclear how the cloud is transformed into a star cluster. Here a scheme of supernova (SN) induced cluster formation is investigated. In this scenario the expanding SN shell accumulates the mass of the cloud. This is accompanied by fragmentation resulting in star formation in the shell. If this stellar shell expands sufficiently slowly, its self-gravity leads to a recollapsing shell, thus forming one or several stellar clusters.In this paper N-body simulations of collapsing shells moving on circular orbits in a galactic potential are presented. It is shown that typical shells (105 M⊙, 30 pc) evolve to twin clusters in the galactocentric distance range between 3 and 11 kpc. Their masses show a strong radial trend: on orbits inside 5 kpc both clusters have almost equal mass. Outside 5 kpc the more massive twin cluster contains about 55% of the shell's mass, whereas the mass of the smaller decreases linearily to 15% at 11 kpc. Outside 11 kpc the collapsing shells end up in a single cluster. Inside 3 kpc the shells are tidally disrupted and only fragments substantially less massive than the initial shell survive.
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