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We present the results of a study aimed at investigating the effects of dynamical evolution on the spatial distribution and mixing of primordial binary stars in multiple-population globular clusters. Multiple stellar population formation models predict that second-generation (SG) stars form segregated in the inner regions of a more extended first-generation (FG) cluster. Our study, based on the results of a survey of N-body simulations, shows that the spatial mixing process for binary stars is more complex than that of single stars since additional processes such as binary ionization, recoil and ejection following binary-single and binary-binary interactions play a key role in determining the spatial distribution of the population of surviving binaries. The efficiency and relative importance of these additional effects depends on the binary binding energy and determines the timescale of the spatial mixing of FG and SG binaries. Our simulations illustrate the role of ionization, recoil and ejection combined with the effects of mass segregation driven by two-body relaxation and show that the complex interplay of all these processes results in a significant extension of the time needed for the complete spatial mixing of FG and SG binaries compared to that of single stars. Clusters in which FG and SG single stars have already reached complete spatial mixing might be characterized by a significant radial gradient in the ratio of the FG-to-SG binary fraction. The implications of the delayed mixing of FG and SG binaries for the differences between the kinematics of the two populations are discussed.
In this paper we study the long-term dynamical evolution of multiple-population clusters, focusing on the evolution of the spatial distributions of the first- (FG) and second-generation (SG) stars.In previous studies we have suggested that SG stars f
We have carried out a set of Monte Carlo simulations to study a number of fundamental aspects of the dynamical evolution of multiple stellar populations in globular clusters with different initial masses, fractions of second generation (2G) stars, an
Globular clusters (GCs) display anomalous light element abundances (HeCNONaMgAl), resembling the yields of hot-hydrogen burning, but there is no consensus yet on the origin of these ubiquitous multiple populations. We present a model in which a super
We study the interaction of the early spherical GC wind powered by Type II supernovae (SNe II) with the surrounding ambient medium consisting of the gaseous disk of a star forming galaxy at redshift z ~> 2. The bubble formed by the wind eventually br
Blue hook (BHk) stars are a rare class of horizontal branch stars that so far have been found in only very few Galactic globular clusters (GCs). The dominant mechanism for producing these objects is currently still unclear. In order to test if the pr