The initial mass function of stars and the star-formation rates of galaxies
Pavel Kroupa (Bonn, Prague), Tereza Jerabkova (ESTEC)

TL;DR
This paper examines the initial mass function of stars and its impact on galaxy star-formation rate measurements, discussing variability, theoretical models, and implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of the galaxy-wide initial mass function and its potential variability, challenging the traditional scale-invariant assumption.
Findings
The galaxy-wide IMF may vary systematically, affecting SFR estimates.
The mmax-Mecl relation plays a crucial role during star formation.
Implications for galaxy evolution and cosmology are discussed.
Abstract
The measured star-formation rates (SFRs) of galaxies comprise an important constraint on galaxy evolution and also on their cosmological boundary conditions. Any available tracer of the SFR depends on the shape of the mass-distribution of formed stars, i.e. on the stellar initial mass function (IMF). The luminous massive stars dominate the observed photon flux while the dim low-mass stars dominate the mass in the freshly formed population. Errors in the number ratio of the massive to low-mass stars lead to errors in SFR measurements and thus to errors concerning the gas-accretion-rates and the gas-consumption time-scales of galaxies. The stellar IMF has traditionally been interpreted to be a scale-invariant probability density distribution function (PDF), but it may instead be an optimal distribution function. In the PDF interpretation, the stellar IMF observed on the stales of…
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