The universal variability of the stellar initial mass function probed by the TIMER survey
Ignacio Mart\'in-Navarro, Adriana de Lorenzo-C\'aceres, Dimitri A., Gadotti, Jairo M\'endez-Abreu, Jes\'us Falc\'on-Barroso, Patricia, S\'anchez-Bl\'azquez, Paula Coelho, Justus Neumann, Glenn van de Ven and, Isabel P\'erez

TL;DR
This study uses advanced modelling and high-quality data to measure the stellar initial mass function (IMF) in a spiral galaxy, revealing systematic spatial variations and insights into galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a new modelling scheme enabling consistent IMF measurements across diverse stellar populations and applies it to the TIMER survey data.
Findings
IMF in NGC 3351 resembles Milky Way-like IMF
Detected systematic spatial variations in IMF slope
Identified metal-poor and Mg-enhanced star-forming regions
Abstract
The debate about the universality of the stellar initial mass function (IMF) revolves around two competing lines of evidence. While measurements in the Milky Way, an archetypal spiral galaxy, seem to support an invariant IMF, the observed properties of massive early-type galaxies (ETGs) favor an IMF somehow sensitive to the local star formation conditions. The fundamental methodological and physical differences between both approaches have hampered, however, a comprehensive understanding of IMF variations. We describe here an improved modelling scheme that allows for the first time consistent IMF measurements across stellar populations with different ages and complex star formation histories. Making use of the exquisite MUSE optical data from the TIMER survey and powered by the MILES stellar population models, we show the age, metallicity, [Mg/Fe], and IMF slope maps of the inner…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
