The Core Mass Function Across Galactic Environments. II. Infrared Dark Cloud Clumps
Mengyao Liu, Jonathan C. Tan, Yu Cheng, Shuo Kong

TL;DR
This study analyzes the core mass function in infrared dark cloud clumps using ALMA data, revealing a top-heavy distribution compared to the stellar initial mass function and comparing it to more evolved protoclusters.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of the core mass function in IRDC clumps at high resolution, highlighting environmental differences in core mass distributions.
Findings
IRDC core mass function is more top-heavy than the stellar IMF.
Comparison shows evolved protoclusters have a steeper core mass function.
Results suggest environment influences core mass distribution in early star-forming regions.
Abstract
We study the core mass function (CMF) within 32 dense clumps in seven infrared dark clouds (IRDCs) with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) via 1.3~mm continuum emission at a resolution of 1". We have identified 107 cores with the dendrogram algorithm, with a median radius of about 0.02 pc. Their masses range from 0.261 to 178 . After applying completeness corrections, we fit the combined IRDC CMF with a power law of the form and derive an index of for and for , which is a significantly more top-heavy distribution than the Salpeter stellar initial mass function (IMF) index of 1.35. We also make a direct comparison of these IRDC clump CMF results to those measured in the more evolved protocluster G286 derived with…
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