Testing the Universality of the Stellar IMF with Chandra and HST
D. A. Coulter, B. D. Lehmer, R. T. Eufrasio, A. Kundu, T. Maccarone,, M. Peacock, A. E. Hornschemeier, A. Basu-Zych, A. H. Gonzalez, C. Maraston,, S. E. Zepf

TL;DR
This study tests whether the stellar initial mass function (IMF) is universal by analyzing X-ray and optical data from ellipticals, finding that a Kroupa-like IMF at high masses best explains the observed low-mass X-ray binary counts.
Contribution
The paper extends previous work by using new data to constrain the high-mass end slope of the IMF, supporting a universal IMF similar to the Kroupa model.
Findings
Observed LMXB counts are consistent with a Kroupa-like IMF.
IMF models with a steep low-mass slope and a flatter high-mass slope fit the data.
The results challenge the bottom-heavy IMF hypothesis for massive ellipticals.
Abstract
The stellar initial mass function (IMF), which is often assumed to be universal across unresolved stellar populations, has recently been suggested to be "bottom-heavy" for massive ellipticals. In these galaxies, the prevalence of gravity-sensitive absorption lines (e.g. Na I and Ca II) in their near-IR spectra implies an excess of low-mass ( ) stars over that expected from a canonical IMF observed in low-mass ellipticals. A direct extrapolation of such a bottom-heavy IMF to high stellar masses ( ) would lead to a corresponding deficit of neutron stars and black holes, and therefore of low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs), per unit near-IR luminosity in these galaxies. Peacock et al. (2014) searched for evidence of this trend and found that the observed number of LMXBs per unit -band luminosity () was nearly constant. We extend this work using new…
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