TL;DR
This study uses Gaia DR2 data to analyze the initial mass function of different Milky Way stellar populations, revealing a bottom-heavy IMF for low-metallicity halo stars likely originating from ancient accretion events.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed IMF measurements for various Milky Way populations, highlighting a bottom-heavy IMF in low-metallicity halo stars associated with early accretion.
Findings
Thin-disc stars have a standard IMF similar to Kroupa.
High-metallicity halo stars have a steeper high-mass slope.
Low-metallicity halo stars exhibit a bottom-heavy, Salpeter-like IMF.
Abstract
We use Gaia DR2 to measure the initial mass function (IMF) of stars within 250 pc and masses in the range 0.2 < m/Msun < 1.0, separated according to kinematics and metallicity, as determined from Gaia transverse velocity, v_T, and location on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (HRD). The predominant thin-disc population (v_T < 40 km/s) has an IMF similar to traditional (e.g. Kroupa 2001}) stellar IMFs, with star numbers per mass interval dN/dm described by a broken power law, m^(-alpha), and index alpha_high=2.03 +0.14/-0.05 above m~0.5, shallowing to alpha_low=1.34 +0.11/-0.22 at m~<0.5. Thick-disc stars (60 km/s < v_T < 150 km/s) and stars belonging to the "high-metallicity" or "red-sequence" halo (v_T > 100 km/s or v_T > 200 km/s, and located above the isochrone on the HRD with metallicity [M/H] > -0.6) have a somewhat steeper high-mass slope, alpha_high=2.35 +0.97/-0.19 (and a similar…
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