Analytical theory for the initial mass function: CO clumps and prestellar cores
Patrick Hennebelle (LERMA, ENS, Paris), Gilles Chabrier (CRAL,, ENS-Lyon)

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytical model based on the Press-Schechter formalism to explain the initial mass function of prestellar cores, linking turbulence, density fluctuations, and gravitational collapse to observed stellar mass distributions.
Contribution
It extends the Press-Schechter formalism to derive the prestellar core IMF and predicts its shape from turbulence and density field properties, providing a theoretical foundation for star formation.
Findings
The core mass function matches observed IMFs well.
The shape results from a power-law and exponential cutoff.
Turbulence influences star formation efficiency negatively.
Abstract
We derive an analytical theory of the prestellar core initial mass function based on an extension of the Press-Schechter statistical formalism. With the same formalism, we also obtain the mass spectrum for the non self-gravitating clumps produced in supersonic flows. The mass spectrum of the self-gravitating cores reproduces very well the observed initial mass function and identifies the different mechanisms responsible for its behaviour. The theory predicts that the shape of the IMF results from two competing contributions, namely a power-law at large scales and an exponential cut-off (lognormal form) centered around the characteristic mass for gravitational collapse. The cut-off exists already in the case of pure thermal collapse, provided that the underlying density field has a lognormal distribution. Whereas pure thermal collapse produces a power-law tail steeper than the Salpeter…
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