Stellar populations dominated by massive stars in dusty starburst galaxies across cosmic time
Zhi-Yu Zhang, D. Romano, R. J. Ivison, P. P. Papadopoulos, F., Matteucci

TL;DR
This study uses molecular isotope ratios in dusty starburst galaxies at high redshift to provide evidence that their stellar initial mass function is top-heavy, indicating a higher proportion of massive stars than in typical galaxies.
Contribution
First direct evidence of a top-heavy stellar initial mass function in distant dusty starbursts using isotope ratio measurements, expanding understanding of galaxy evolution.
Findings
Starburst galaxies at z~2-3 have a low 13CO/C18O ratio.
Chemical evolution models support a top-heavy initial mass function.
Implications for galaxy formation and evolution models.
Abstract
All measurements of cosmic star formation must assume an initial distribution of stellar masses -- the stellar initial mass function -- in order to extrapolate from the star-formation rate measured for typically rare, massive stars (> 8 Msun) to the total star-formation rate across the full stellar mass spectrum. The shape of the stellar initial mass function in various galaxy populations underpins our understanding of the formation and evolution of galaxies across cosmic time. Classical determinations of the stellar initial mass function in local galaxies are traditionally made at ultraviolet, optical and near-infrared wavelengths, which cannot be probed in dust-obscured galaxies, especially in distant starbursts, whose apparent star-formation rates are hundreds to thousands of times higher than in our Milky Way, selected at submillimetre (rest-frame far-infrared) wavelengths. The…
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