The star formation efficiency and its relation to variations in the initial mass function
Paul C. Clark, Ian A. Bonnell, Ralf S. Klessen

TL;DR
This study explores how the initial energy state of turbulent molecular clouds influences star formation efficiency and the resulting initial mass function, revealing conditions that produce observed stellar mass distributions.
Contribution
It demonstrates the impact of initial energy states on star formation efficiency and the shape of the IMF, highlighting the role of competitive accretion and cloud binding.
Findings
Unbound clouds have low star formation efficiency.
Competitive accretion shapes the IMF when PE >= KE.
More unbound clouds produce flatter IMFs.
Abstract
We investigate how the dynamical state of a turbulently supported, 1000 solar mass, molecular cloud affects the properties of the cluster it forms, focusing our discussion on the star formation efficiency (SFE) and the initial mass function (IMF). A variety of initial energy states are examined in this paper, ranging from clouds with PE = 0.1 KE to clouds with PE = 10 KE, and for both isothermal and piece-wise polytropic equations of state (similar to that suggested by Larson). It is found that arbitrary star formation efficiencies are possible, with strongly unbound clouds yielding very low star formation efficiencies. We suggest that the low star formation efficiency in the Maddelena cloud may be a consequence of the relatively unbound state of its internal structure. It is also found that competitive accretion results in the observed IMF when the clouds have initial energy states of…
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