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We present new results on the evolution of the mass function of the globular cluster system of the Milky Way, taking the effect of residual gas expulsion into account. We assume that gas embedded star clusters start with a power-law mass function with slope beta=2. The dissolution of the clusters is then studied under the combined influence of residual gas expulsion driven by energy feedback from massive stars, stellar mass-loss, two-body relaxation and an external tidal field. The influence of residual gas expulsion is studied by applying results from a large grid of N-body simulations computed by Baumgardt & Kroupa (2007). In our model, star clusters with masses less than 10^5 M_sun lose their residual gas on timescales much shorter than their crossing time and residual gas expulsion is the main dissolution mechanism for star clusters, destroying about 95% of all clusters within a few 10s of Myr. We find that in this case the final mass function of globular clusters is established mainly by the gas expulsion and therefore nearly independent of the strength of the external tidal field, and that a power-law mass function for the gas embedded star clusters is turned into a present-day log-normal one. Another consequence of residual gas expulsion and the associated strong infant mortality of star clusters is that the Galactic halo stars come from dissolved star clusters. Since field halo stars would come mainly from low-mass, short-lived clusters, our model provides an explanation for the observed abundance variations of light elements among globular cluster stars and the absence of such variations among the halo field stars.
NGC1851 is surrounded by a stellar component that extends more than ten times beyond the tidal radius. Although the nature of this stellar structure is not known, it has been suggested to be a sparse halo of stars or associated with a stellar stream.
We present a detailed kinematic analysis of the outer halo globular cluster (GC) system of M31. Our basis for this is a set of new spectroscopic observations for 78 clusters lying at projected distances between Rproj ~20-140 kpc from the M31 centre.
Direct N-body calculations are presented of the early evolution of exposed clusters to quantify the influence of gas expulsion on the time-varying surface brightness. By assuming that the embedded OB stars drive out most of the gas after a given time
Recently de Marchi, Paresce & Pulone (2007) studied a sample of twenty globular clusters and found that all clusters with high concentrations have steep stellar mass-functions while clusters with low concentration have comparatively shallow mass-func
We present a kinematic analysis of the globular cluster (GC) system in the giant elliptical galaxy (gE) M60 in the Virgo cluster. Using the photometric and spectroscopic database of 121 GCs (83 blue GCs and 38 red GCs), we have investigated the kinem