The Influence of Galaxy Environment on the Stellar Initial Mass Function of Early-Type Galaxies
Giulio Rosani, Anna Pasquali, Francesco La Barbera, Ignacio Ferreras,, Alexandre Vazdekis

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the stellar initial mass function (IMF) in early-type galaxies varies with environment, finding it depends on galaxy mass but not on environment or hierarchy, suggesting the IMF is an intrinsic property.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the IMF slope in early-type galaxies is unaffected by environment or galaxy hierarchy, using spectral analysis and stellar population models.
Findings
IMF slope increases with velocity dispersion
No dependence of IMF on environment or galaxy hierarchy
IMF is likely an intrinsic galaxy property
Abstract
In this paper we investigate whether the stellar initial mass function of early-type galaxies depends on their host environment. To this purpose, we have selected a sample of early-type galaxies from the SPIDER catalogue, characterized their environment through the group catalogue of Wang et al. and used their optical SDSS spectra to constrain the IMF slope, through the analysis of IMF-sensitive spectral indices. To reach a high enough signal-to-noise ratio, we have stacked spectra in velocity dispersion () bins, on top of separating the sample by galaxy hierarchy and host halo mass, as proxies for galaxy environment. In order to constrain the IMF, we have compared observed line strengths to predictions of MIUSCAT/EMILES synthetic stellar population models, with varying age, metallicity, and "bimodal" (low-mass tapered) IMF slope (). Consistent with previous…
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