An assessment of the evidence from ATLAS3D for a variable initial mass function
Bart Clauwens (1, 2), Joop Schaye (1), Marijn Franx (1) ((1) Leiden, Observatory University Leiden, (2) Instituut-Lorentz for Theoretical Physics, University Leiden)

TL;DR
This study examines the evidence for a variable initial mass function in early type galaxies from the ATLAS3D survey, highlighting uncertainties in stellar mass measurements and their impact on IMF conclusions.
Contribution
It investigates the effects of measurement errors and sample selection on the reported IMF variations, emphasizing the need for further data to confirm intrinsic IMF variability.
Findings
Measurement errors could mimic IMF variation trends.
No strong correlation between IMF and environment.
IMF shows a trend with velocity dispersion in certain mass ranges.
Abstract
The ATLAS3D Survey has reported evidence for a non-universal stellar initial mass function (IMF) for early type galaxies (ETGs) (Cappellari et al. 2012, 2013b,a). The IMF was constrained by comparing stellar mass measurements from kinematic data with those from spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting. Here we investigate possible effects of scatter in the reported stellar mass measurements and their potential impact on the IMF determination. We find that a trend of the IMF mismatch parameter with the kinematic mass to light ratio, comparable to the trend observed by Cappellari et al. (2012), could arise if the Gaussian errors of the kinematic mass determination are typically 30%. Without additional data, it is hard to separate between the option that the IMF has a true large intrinsic variation or the option that the errors in the determination are larger than anticipated. A…
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