How stellar clusters disrupt, and over what timescales, is intimately linked with how they form. Here, we review the theory and observations of cluster disruption, both the suggested initial rapid dissolution phase (infant mortality) and the longer timescale processes that affect clusters after they emerge from their progenitor GMCs. Over the past decade, the standard paradigm that has developed is that all/most stars are formed in clusters and that the vast majority of these groups are disrupted over short timescales (< 10 Myr). This is thought to be due to the removal of the left over gas from the star-formation process, known as infant mortality. However, recent results have suggested that the fraction of stars that form in clusters h...
The observed average lifetime of the population of star clusters in the Solar Neighbourhood, the Sma...
In 1958 Jan Oort remarked that the lack of old clusters in the solar neighborhood (SN) implies that ...
It is generally believed that most (if not all) stars are born in clusters. Nevertheless, we see mos...
Star clusters are often used as tracers of major star formation events in external galaxies as they ...
Many embedded star clusters do not evolve into long-lived bound clusters. The most popular explanati...
We review the theory and observations of star cluster disruption. The three main phases and correspo...
Infant mortality brought about by the expulsion of a star cluster’s natal gas is widely invoked to e...
An overview of our current understanding of the formation and evolution of star clusters is given, w...
Context. Massive Galactic clusters (> 1000 M) exhibit a clear correlation between cluster density...
Star clusters are observed in almost every galaxy. In this thesis we address several fundamental pro...
We present a simple analytical description of the disruption of star clusters in a tidal field. The ...
Context. Most stars form as part of a star cluster. The most massive clusters in the Milky Way exist...
In 1958 Jan Oort remarked that the lack of old clusters in the solar neighborhood (SN) implies that ...
We present a simple analytical description of the disruption of star clusters in a tidal field. The...
The vast majority of galaxies contains large populations of stellar clusters, which are bound groups...
The observed average lifetime of the population of star clusters in the Solar Neighbourhood, the Sma...
In 1958 Jan Oort remarked that the lack of old clusters in the solar neighborhood (SN) implies that ...
It is generally believed that most (if not all) stars are born in clusters. Nevertheless, we see mos...
Star clusters are often used as tracers of major star formation events in external galaxies as they ...
Many embedded star clusters do not evolve into long-lived bound clusters. The most popular explanati...
We review the theory and observations of star cluster disruption. The three main phases and correspo...
Infant mortality brought about by the expulsion of a star cluster’s natal gas is widely invoked to e...
An overview of our current understanding of the formation and evolution of star clusters is given, w...
Context. Massive Galactic clusters (> 1000 M) exhibit a clear correlation between cluster density...
Star clusters are observed in almost every galaxy. In this thesis we address several fundamental pro...
We present a simple analytical description of the disruption of star clusters in a tidal field. The ...
Context. Most stars form as part of a star cluster. The most massive clusters in the Milky Way exist...
In 1958 Jan Oort remarked that the lack of old clusters in the solar neighborhood (SN) implies that ...
We present a simple analytical description of the disruption of star clusters in a tidal field. The...
The vast majority of galaxies contains large populations of stellar clusters, which are bound groups...
The observed average lifetime of the population of star clusters in the Solar Neighbourhood, the Sma...
In 1958 Jan Oort remarked that the lack of old clusters in the solar neighborhood (SN) implies that ...
It is generally believed that most (if not all) stars are born in clusters. Nevertheless, we see mos...