Transition of the initial mass function in the metal-poor environments
Sunmyon Chon, Kazuyuki Omukai, and Raffaella Schneider

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic simulations to explore how metallicity influences star formation and the resulting initial mass function, revealing a transition from top-heavy to Chabrier-like IMFs as metallicity increases.
Contribution
It demonstrates how dust cooling and filamentary structures at different metallicities affect the stellar mass distribution in low-metallicity environments.
Findings
Low-metallicity environments produce top-heavy IMFs.
Higher metallicity leads to more Chabrier-like IMFs.
Cooling and filament formation influence star mass distribution.
Abstract
We study star cluster formation in a low-metallicity environment using three dimensional hydrodynamic simulations. Starting from a turbulent cloud core, we follow the formation and growth of protostellar systems with different metallicities ranging from to . The cooling induced by dust grains promotes fragmentation at small scales and the formation of low-mass stars with -- when . While the number of low-mass stars increases with metallicity, the stellar mass distribution is still top-heavy for compared to the Chabrier initial mass function (IMF). In these cases, star formation begins after the turbulent motion decays and a single massive cloud core monolithically collapses to form a central massive stellar system. The circumstellar disk preferentially feeds the mass to…
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