Evidence for a Non-Uniform Initial Mass Function in the Local Universe
Gerhardt R. Meurer, O.I. Wong, J.H. Kim, D.J. Hanish, T.M. Heckman, J., Werk, J. Bland-Hawthorn, M.A. Dopita, M.A. Zwaan, B. Koribalski, M. Seibert,, D.A. Thilker, H.C. Ferguson, R.L. Webster, M.E. Putman, P.M. Knezek, M.T., Doyle, M.J. Drinkwater, C.G. Hoopes, V.A. Kilborn

TL;DR
This study presents evidence that the Initial Mass Function (IMF) varies across galaxies, challenging the assumption of its universality and affecting interpretations of star formation and chemical evolution.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence for non-uniform IMF variations linked to galaxy properties, suggesting a pressure-driven mechanism influencing star formation.
Findings
H-alpha/FUV flux ratio correlates with galaxy surface brightness.
Variations in IMF parameters are consistent with observed flux ratios.
Implications for galaxy evolution and chemical abundance interpretations.
Abstract
Many results in modern astrophysics rest on the notion that the Initial Mass Function (IMF) is universal. Our observations of HI selected galaxies in the light of H-alpha and the far-ultraviolet (FUV) challenge this notion. The flux ratio H-alpha/FUV from these two star formation tracers shows strong correlations with the surface-brightness in H-alpha and the R band: Low Surface Brightness (LSB) galaxies have lower ratios compared to High Surface Brightness galaxies and to expectations from equilibrium star formation models using commonly favored IMF parameters. Weaker but significant correlations of H-alpha/FUV with luminosity, rotational velocity and dynamical mass are found as well as a systematic trend with morphology. The correlated variations of H-alpha/FUV with other global parameters are thus part of the larger family of galaxy scaling relations. The H-alpha/FUV correlations can…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Advanced Mathematical Theories and Applications
