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Hubble Space Telescope Proper Motion (HSTPROMO) Catalogs of Galactic Globular Clusters. VII. Energy Equipartition

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arxiv 2206.05300 v1 pith:V7446HHP submitted 2022-06-10 astro-ph.GA

Hubble Space Telescope Proper Motion (HSTPROMO) Catalogs of Galactic Globular Clusters. VII. Energy Equipartition

classification astro-ph.GA
keywords equipartitionclusterclustersdegreeenergychangesmasscatalogues
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We examine the degree of energy equipartition in 9 Galactic globular clusters using proper motions measured with the Hubble Space Telescope. For most clusters in the sample, this is the first energy equipartition study ever performed. This study is also the largest of its kind, albeit with only 9 clusters. We begin by rigorously cleaning the catalogues to remove poor-quality measurements and to ensure high signal-to-noise for the study. Using the cleaned catalogues, we investigate how velocity dispersion $\sigma$ changes with stellar mass $m$. We fit two functional forms: the first, a classic power-law of the form $\sigma \propto m^{-\eta}$ where $\eta$ is the degree of energy equipartition, and the second from Bianchini et al. (2016) parameterised by an equipartition mass $m_{eq}$ where $\eta$ changes with stellar mass. We find that both functions fit well but cannot distinguish with statistical significance which function provides the best fit. All clusters exhibit varying degrees of partial equipartition; no cluster is at or near full equipartition. We search for correlations of $\eta$ and $m_{eq}$ with various cluster properties. The most significant correlation is observed with the number of core or median relaxation times ($N_{core}$ or $N_{half}$) the cluster has experienced. Finally, we determine the radial equipartition profile for each cluster, that is, how the degree of equipartition changes with projected distance from the cluster centre. We do not detect statistically significant trends in the degree of equipartition with radius. Overall, our observational findings are in broad agreement with theoretical predictions from N-body models published in recent years.

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