The relation between the most-massive star and its parental star cluster mass
C. Weidner (1,2), P. Kroupa (3), I. Bonnell (1) ((1) St Andrews, University, (2) Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, (3) AIfA Bonn)

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between the most-massive star in a cluster and the cluster’s total mass, finding evidence against random sampling from the IMF and suggesting physical processes influence star formation limits.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis showing that star cluster mass constrains the maximum stellar mass, challenging the assumption of random sampling from the IMF.
Findings
Star clusters with M_ecl > 10^2 M_sol do not randomly sample the IMF.
Maximum star mass plateaus around 25 M_sol in certain cluster mass ranges.
Statistical evidence strongly rejects random sampling hypothesis for massive clusters.
Abstract
We present a thorough literature study of the most-massive star, m_max, in several young star clusters in order to assess whether or not star clusters are populated from the stellar initial mass function (IMF) by random sampling over the mass range 0.01 < m < 150 M_sol without being constrained by the cluster mass, M_ecl. The data reveal a partition of the sample into lowest mass objects (M_ecl < 10^2 M_sol), moderate mass clusters (10^2 M_sol < M_ecl < 10^3 M_sol) and rich clusters above 10^3 M_sol. Additionally, there is a plateau of a constant maximal star mass (m_max ~ 25 M_sol) for clusters with masses between 10^3 M_sol and 4 10^3 M_sol. Statistical tests of this data set reveal that the hypothesis of random sampling from the IMF between 0.01 and 150 M_sol is highly unlikely for star clusters more massive than 10^2 M_sol with a probability of p ~ 2 10^-7 for the objects with M_ecl…
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