On the origin of the bimodal rotational velocity distribution in stellar clusters: rotation on the pre-main sequence

Author:

Bastian Nate1,Kamann Sebastian1ORCID,Amard Louis2,Charbonnel Corinne34,Haemmerlé Lionel3,Matt Sean P2

Affiliation:

1. Astrophysics Research Institute, Liverpool John Moores University, 146 Brownlow Hill, Liverpool L3 5RF, UK

2. Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of Exeter,Stoker Road, Devon, Exeter EX4 4QL, UK

3. Department of Astronomy, University of Geneva, Chemin de Pégase 51, CH-1290 Versoix, Switzerland

4. IRAP, UMR 5277 CNRS and Université de Toulouse, 14, Av. E.Belin, F-31400 Toulouse, France

Abstract

ABSTRACT We address the origin of the observed bimodal rotational distribution of stars in massive young and intermediate age stellar clusters. This bimodality is seen as split main sequences at young ages and also has been recently directly observed in the Vsini distribution of stars within massive young and intermediate age clusters. Previous models have invoked binary interactions as the origin of this bimodality, although these models are unable to reproduce all of the observational constraints on the problem. Here, we suggest that such a bimodal rotational distribution is set-up early within a cluster’s life, i.e. within the first few Myr. Observations show that the period distribution of low-mass ($\lesssim\! 2 \, \mathrm{M}_\odot$) pre-main-sequence (PMS) stars is bimodal in many young open clusters, and we present a series of models to show that if such a bimodality exists for stars on the PMS that it is expected to manifest as a bimodal rotational velocity (at fixed mass/luminosity) on the main sequence for stars with masses in excess of ∼1.5 M⊙. Such a bimodal period distribution of PMS stars may be caused by whether stars have lost (rapid rotators) or been able to retain (slow rotators) their circumstellar discs throughout their PMS lifetimes. We conclude with a series of predictions for observables based on our model.

Funder

Royal Society

European Research Council

Swiss National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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