The IMF from Low to High Redshift
Laura Greggio, Alvio Renzini

TL;DR
This paper discusses how variations in the Initial Mass Function (IMF) influence galaxy and cluster properties across different redshifts, emphasizing the importance of considering full consequences of IMF changes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how specific IMF slope variations affect galaxy and cluster properties, highlighting the need to explore all implications of proposed IMF changes.
Findings
Small IMF slope variations significantly alter stellar population demographics.
Different IMF slopes control key galaxy and cluster properties such as M/L ratio and metal mass.
IMF variations impact the evolution of galaxy properties over redshift.
Abstract
From time to time, and quite more frequently in recent years, claims appear favoring a variable Initial Mass Function (IMF), one way or another, either in time or space. In this chapter we add our two pennies of wisdom, illustrating how the IMF affects various properties of galaxies and galaxy clusters. We start by showing that even relatively small variations of the IMF slope have large effects on the demography of stellar populations, moving the bulk of the stellar mass from one end to the other of the distribution. We then point out how the slope of the IMF in different mass ranges controls specific major properties of galaxies and clusters. The slope of the IMF below ~1 solar mass controls the M/L ratio of local ellipticals, whereas the slope between ~1 and ~1.4 solar masses controls the evolution with redshift of such ratio, hence of the fundamental plane of elliptical galaxies.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Financial Crisis and Policies
