# A High-Resolution Multiband Survey of Westerlund 2 With the Hubble Space   Telescope. III. The present-day stellar mass function

**Authors:** Peter Zeidler, Antonella Nota, Eva K. Grebel, Elena Sabbi, Anna, Pasquali, Monica Tosi, Carol Christian

arXiv: 1701.07302 · 2017-02-24

## TL;DR

This study provides a detailed high-resolution analysis of Westerlund 2's stellar population and mass function, revealing mass segregation, a total mass of about 36,000 solar masses, and possible formation triggers like cloud-cloud collision.

## Contribution

It offers the first spatially resolved, completeness-corrected present-day mass function and insights into the cluster's formation history and primordial mass segregation.

## Key findings

- Mass function slope of -1.46, indicating a top-heavy distribution.
- Total cluster mass estimated at 3.6 x 10^4 solar masses.
- Evidence of primordial mass segregation and possible cloud-cloud collision origin.

## Abstract

We present a detailed analysis of the spatial distribution of the stellar population and the present-day mass function (PDMF) of the Westerlund 2 (Wd2) region using the data from our high resolution multi-band survey with the Hubble Space Telescope. We used state-of-the-art artificial star tests to determine spatially resolved completeness maps for each of the broad-band filters. We reach a level of completeness of 50 % down to F555W=24.8 mag (0.7 $M_\odot$) and F814W=23.3 mag (0.2 $M_\odot$) in the optical and F125W=20.2 mag and F160W=19.4 mag (both 0.12 $M_\odot$) in the infrared throughout the field of view. We had previously reported that the core of Wd2 consists of two clumps: namely the main cluster (MC) and the northern clump (NC). From the spatial distribution of the completeness corrected population, we find that their stellar surface densities are 1114 stars pc$^{-2}$ and 555 stars pc$^{-2}$, respectively, down to F814W=21.8 mag. We find that the present-day mass function (PDMF) of Wd2 has a slope of $\Gamma=-1.46 \pm 0.06$, which translates to a total stellar cluster mass of $(3.6 \pm 0.3) \cdot 10^4 M_\odot$. The spatial analysis of the PDMF reveals that the cluster population is mass-segregated, most likely primordial. In addition, we report the detection of a stellar population of spatially uniformly distributed low-mass (<0.15 $M_\odot$) stars, extending into the gas ridges of the surrounding gas and dust cloud, as well as a confined region of reddened stars, likely caused by a foreground CO cloud. We find hints that a cloud-cloud collision might be the origin of the formation of Wd2.

## Full text

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## Figures

21 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.07302/full.md

## References

93 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.07302/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.07302