Evidence for a non-universal stellar initial mass function from the integrated properties of SDSS galaxies
Erik A. Hoversten, Karl Glazebrook

TL;DR
This study uses SDSS galaxy data to investigate how the stellar initial mass function varies with galaxy luminosity, finding evidence for a non-universal IMF that depends on galaxy brightness.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale statistical analysis showing luminosity-dependent IMF variations using integrated galaxy light properties.
Findings
Galaxies brighter than M_r,0.1 = -20 have a universal IMF similar to Salpeter.
Fainter galaxies prefer steeper IMFs, indicating fewer massive stars.
Sample bias is ruled out as the cause of IMF variation with luminosity.
Abstract
This paper revisits the classical Kennicutt method for inferring the stellar initial mass function (IMF) from the integrated light properties of galaxies. The large size, uniform high quality data set from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey DR4 is combined with more in depth modeling and quantitative statistical analysis to search for systematic IMF variations as a function of galaxy luminosity. Galaxy H alpha equivalent widths are compared to a broadband color index to constrain the IMF. This parameter space is useful for breaking degeneracies which are traditionally problematic. Age and dust corrections are largely orthogonal to IMF variations. In addition the effects of metallicity and smooth star formation history e-folding times are small compared to IMF variations. We find that for the sample as a whole the best fitting IMF slope above 0.5 M_sun is Gamma = 1.4535 with a negligible…
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