A Core Mass Function Indistinguishable from the Salpeter Stellar Initial Mass Function Using 1000 au Resolution ALMA Observations
Genaro Su\'arez (1,2), Roberto Galv\'an-Madrid (2), Luis Aguilar (3),, Adam Ginsburg (4), Sundar Srinivasan (2), Hauyu Baobab Liu (5), Carlos G., Rom\'an-Z\'u\~niga (3) ((1) Department of Physics, Astronomy, The, University of Western Ontario, (2) Instituto de Astronom\'ia

TL;DR
This study measures the core mass function in a massive star-forming region using high-resolution ALMA data, finding it statistically indistinguishable from the stellar Salpeter IMF, supporting the idea that the IMF originates from the CMF.
Contribution
First high-resolution (1000 au) measurement of the core mass function in a massive star-forming clump, demonstrating its similarity to the stellar IMF.
Findings
CMF slope is approximately -1.11.
CMF is statistically indistinguishable from the Salpeter IMF.
Results support the inheritance of the IMF shape from the CMF.
Abstract
We present the core mass function (CMF) of the massive star-forming clump G33.92+0.11 using 1.3 mm observations obtained with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). With a resolution of 1000 au, this is one of the highest resolution CMF measurements to date. The CMF is corrected by flux and number incompleteness to obtain a sample that is complete for gas masses . The resulting CMF is well represented by a power-law function (), whose slope is determined using two different approaches: by least-squares fitting of power-law functions to the flux- and number-corrected CMF, and by comparing the observed CMF to simulated samples with similar incompleteness. We provide a prescription to quantify and correct a flattening bias affecting the slope fits in the first approach, which is caused by small-sample or edge…
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