The IMF of stellar clusters: effects of accretion and feedback
Sami Dib (1), Mohsen Shadmehri (2), Paolo Padoan (3), G. Maheswar (4),, D. K. Ojha (5), Fazeleh Khajenabi (6) ((1) CEA/Saclay, (2) NUI, (3), ICREA-ICC, (4) ARIES, (5) TIFR, (6) UCD)

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive model of star cluster formation that links core evolution, accretion, and feedback to reproduce observed initial mass functions and core mass functions, highlighting the impact of environmental variations.
Contribution
The model uniquely integrates core accretion, feedback effects, and core-to-star transformation to accurately reproduce the IMF and core mass function of the Orion Nebula Cluster.
Findings
Reproduces the shape and normalization of the ONC's IMF.
Predicts a rapid star formation timescale of ~2.3 x 10^5 years.
Shows that IMF variations depend on clump and core properties.
Abstract
(abridged) We develop a model which describes the coevolution of the mass function of dense cores and of the IMF in a protocluster clump. In the model, cores injected in the clump evolve under the effect of gas accretion. Accretion onto the cores follows a time-dependent accretion rate that describes accretion in a turbulent medium. Once the accretion timescales of cores exceed their contraction timescales, they are turned into stars. We include the effect of feedback by the newly formed massive stars through their stellar winds. A fraction of the wind's energy is assumed to counter gravity and disperse the gas from the protocluster and as a consequence, quench further star formation. The latter effect sets the final IMF of the cluster. We apply our model to a clump that is expected to resemble the progenitor clump of the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC). Our model is able to reproduce both…
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