ALMA-IMF III -- Investigating the origin of stellar masses: Top-heavy core mass function in the W43-MM2&MM3 mini-starburst
Y. Pouteau, F. Motte, T. Nony, R. Galv\'an-Madrid, A. Men'shchikov, S., Bontemps, J.-F. Robitaille, F. Louvet, A. Ginsburg, F. Herpin, A., L\'opez-Sepulcre, P. Dell'Ova, A. Gusdorf, P. Sanhueza, A. M. Stutz, N., Brouillet, B. Thomasson, M. Armante, T. Baug, G. Busquet

TL;DR
This study reveals a top-heavy core mass function in the W43-MM2&MM3 mini-starburst, suggesting that the initial mass distribution of star-forming cores may not be universal and could influence the resulting stellar initial mass function.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of the core mass function in W43-MM2&MM3, showing a top-heavy slope that challenges the universality of the IMF.
Findings
Core mass function slope is top-heavy with a=-0.95
The CMF shape is robust against analysis variations
IMF may inherit top-heavy characteristics from parental CMFs
Abstract
The ALMA-IMF Large Program observed the W43-MM2-MM3 ridge, whose 1.3mm and 3mm ALMA 12m array continuum images reach a 2500au spatial resolution. We used both the best-sensitivity and the line-free ALMA-IMF images, reduced the noise with the multi-resolution segmentation technique MnGSeg, and derived the most complete and most robust core catalog possible. Using two different extraction software packages, getsf and GExt2D, we identified 200 compact sources, whose 100 common sources have on average fluxes consistent to within 30%. We filtered sources with non-negligible free-free contamination and corrected fluxes from line contamination, resulting in a W43-MM2-MM3 catalog of 205 getsf cores. With a median deconvolved FWHM size of 3400au, core masses range from 0.1Msun to 70Msun and the getsf catalog is 90% complete down to 0.8Msun. The high-mass end of the core mass function (CMF) of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
