Lower mass normalization of the stellar initial mass function for dense massive early-type galaxies at z ~ 1.4
A. Gargiulo, P. Saracco, M. Longhetti, S. Tamburri, I. Lonoce, F., Ciocca

TL;DR
This study investigates how the stellar initial mass function normalization in dense, massive early-type galaxies at z ~ 1.4 compares to local galaxies, revealing a consistent IMF trend over 9 billion years but with a lower mass-normalization.
Contribution
It provides the first direct comparison of IMF normalization in dense high-redshift ETGs with local counterparts, showing similar trends but lower normalization at high redshift.
Findings
High-z dense ETGs follow the same IMF-sigma_e trend as local ETGs.
High-z dense ETGs have a lower mass-normalization than local ETGs.
IMF trends are consistent over 9 Gyr of galaxy evolution.
Abstract
This paper aims at understanding if the normalization of the stellar initial mass function (IMF) of massive early-type galaxies (ETGs) varies with cosmic time and/or with mean stellar mass density Sigma (M*/2\pi Re^2). For this purpose we collected a sample of 18 dense (Sigma>2500 M_sun/pc^2) ETGs at 1.2<z<1.6 with available velocity dispersion sigma_e. We have constrained their mass-normalization by comparing their true stellar masses (M_true) derived through virial theorem, hence IMF independent, with those inferred through the fit of the photometry assuming a reference IMF (M_ref). Adopting the virial estimator as proxy of the true stellar mass, we have assumed for these ETGs zero dark matter (DM). However, dynamical models and numerical simulations of galaxy evolution have shown that the DM fraction within Re in dense high-z ETGs is negligible. We have considered the possible bias…
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