Spectroscopic Constraints on the Form of the Stellar Cluster Mass Function
N. Bastian, I.S. Konstantopoulos, G. Trancho, D.R. Weisz, S.S. Larsen,, M. Fouesneau, C. B. Kaschinski, and M. Gieles

TL;DR
This study uses spectroscopic data of young stellar clusters to investigate whether a fundamental upper limit exists in the initial cluster mass function, finding evidence supporting a truncated mass distribution in various galaxy environments.
Contribution
It introduces a spectroscopic method to constrain the ICMF truncation and applies it to multiple galaxies, providing new evidence for a universal upper mass limit.
Findings
Spectroscopic ages support a truncated ICMF with a truncation mass of 5-6×10^5 Msun.
Evidence of environmental dependence in the cluster mass function truncation.
Results are consistent across different galaxy types and previous photometric studies.
Abstract
This contribution addresses the question of whether the initial cluster mass function (ICMF) has a fundamental limit (or truncation) at high masses. The shape of the ICMF at high masses can be studied using the most massive young (<10 Myr) clusters, however this has proven difficult due to low-number statistics. In this contribution we use an alternative method based on the luminosities of the brightest clusters, combined with their ages. If a truncation is present, a generic prediction (nearly independent of the cluster disruption law adopted) is that the median age of bright clusters should be younger than that of fainter clusters. In the case of an non-truncated ICMF, the median age should be independent of cluster luminosity. Here, we present optical spectroscopy of twelve young stellar clusters in the face-on spiral galaxy NGC 2997. The spectra are used to estimate the age of each…
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