Bibcode
Corsaro, E.; Lee, Yueh-Ning; García, Rafael A.; Hennebelle, Patrick; Mathur, Savita; Beck, Paul G.; Mathis, Stephane; Stello, Dennis; Bouvier, Jérôme
Bibliographical reference
Nature Astronomy, Volume 1, id. 0064 (2017).
Advertised on:
3
2017
Citations
75
Refereed citations
66
Description
Stellar clusters form by gravitational collapse of turbulent molecular
clouds, with up to several thousand stars per cluster1. They
are thought to be the birthplace of most stars and therefore play an
important role in our understanding of star formation, a fundamental
problem in astrophysics2,3. The initial conditions of the
molecular cloud establish its dynamical history until the stellar
cluster is born. However, the evolution of the cloud's angular momentum
during cluster formation is not well understood4. Current
observations have suggested that turbulence scrambles the angular
momentum of the cluster-forming cloud, preventing spin alignment among
stars within a cluster5. Here we use
asteroseismology6-8 to measure the inclination angles of spin
axes in 48 stars from the two old open clusters NGC 6791 and NGC 6819.
The stars within each cluster show strong alignment. Three-dimensional
hydrodynamical simulations of proto-cluster formation show that at least
50% of the initial proto-cluster kinetic energy has to be rotational in
order to obtain strong stellar-spin alignment within a cluster. Our
result indicates that the global angular momentum of the cluster-forming
clouds was efficiently transferred to each star and that its imprint has
survived several gigayears since the clusters formed.