Abstract

ABSTRACT Globular clusters are dense stellar systems whose core slowly contracts under the effect of self-gravity. The rate of this process was recently found to be directly linked to the initial amount of velocity anisotropy: tangentially anisotropic clusters contract faster than radially anisotropic ones. Furthermore, initially anisotropic clusters are found to generically tend towards more isotropic distributions during the onset of contraction. Chandrasekhar’s ‘non-resonant’ (NR) theory of diffusion describes this relaxation as being driven by a sequence of local two-body deflections along each star’s orbit. We explicitly tailor this NR prediction to anisotropic clusters, and compare it with N-body realizations of Plummer spheres with varying degrees of anisotropy. The NR theory is shown to recover remarkably well the detailed shape of the orbital diffusion and the associated initial isotropization, up to a global multiplicative prefactor which increases with anisotropy. Strikingly, a simple effective isotropic prescription provides almost as good a fit, as long as the cluster’s anisotropy is not too strong. For these more extreme clusters, accounting for long-range resonant relaxation may be necessary to capture these clusters’ long-term evolution.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call