The High-Mass Stellar Initial Mass Function in M31 Clusters
Daniel R. Weisz, L. Clifton Johnson, Daniel Foreman-Mackey, Andrew E., Dolphin, Lori C. Beerman, Benjamin F. Williams, Julianne J. Dalcanton,, Hans-Walter Rix, David W. Hogg, Morgan Fouesneau, Benjamin D. Johnson, Eric, F. Bell, Martha L. Boyer, Dimitrios Gouliermis

TL;DR
This study provides the most robust measurement to date of the high-mass stellar initial mass function in M31 clusters, revealing a universal but slightly steeper slope than canonical values, with implications for star formation rate estimates.
Contribution
It offers the first large systematic analysis of the high-mass IMF in M31 clusters, demonstrating its universality and refining its slope compared to previous estimates.
Findings
High-mass IMF slope in M31 clusters is approximately 1.45.
No significant dependence of IMF slope on cluster age, mass, or size.
Implications for star formation rates and stellar population models.
Abstract
We have undertaken the largest systematic study of the high-mass stellar initial mass function (IMF) to date using the optical color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) of 85 resolved, young (4 Myr < t < 25 Myr), intermediate mass star clusters (10^3-10^4 Msun), observed as part of the Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury (PHAT) program. We fit each cluster's CMD to measure its mass function (MF) slope for stars >2 Msun. For the ensemble of clusters, the distribution of stellar MF slopes is best described by with a very small intrinsic scatter. The data also imply no significant dependencies of the MF slope on cluster age, mass, and size, providing direct observational evidence that the measured MF represents the IMF. This analysis implies that the high-mass IMF slope in M31 clusters is universal with a slope () that is steeper than…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
