The Importance of Radiative Feedback for the Stellar Initial Mass Function
Matthew R. Bate (University of Exeter)

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that radiative feedback in star formation simulations significantly influences the initial mass function by regulating star formation, reducing fragmentation, and aligning simulated star-to-brown dwarf ratios with observations.
Contribution
The paper introduces radiation hydrodynamical simulations with realistic physics showing radiative feedback's role in shaping the stellar initial mass function and star formation efficiency.
Findings
Radiative feedback terminates star formation after about one local dynamical time.
It reduces the formation of brown dwarfs, increasing the star to brown dwarf ratio to about 5:1.
The characteristic stellar mass becomes independent of initial conditions when radiative feedback is included.
Abstract
We investigate the effect of radiative feedback on the star formation process using radiation hydrodynamical simulations. We repeat the previous hydrodynamical star cluster formation simulations of Bate et al., and Bate & Bonnell, but we use a realistic gas equation of state and radiative transfer in the flux-limited diffusion approximation rather than the original barotropic equation of state. Whereas star formation in the barotropic simulations continued unabated until the simulation was stopped, we find that radiative feedback essentially terminates the production of new objects after roughly one local dynamical time. Radiative feedback also dramatically decreases the propensity of massive circumstellar discs to fragment and inhibits fragmentation of other dense gas (e.g. filaments) close to existing protostellar objects. These two effects decrease the numbers of protostars formed…
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