ALMA-IMF XV: The core mass function in the high-mass star-formation regime
F. Louvet, P. Sanhueza, A. Stutz, A. Men'shchikov, F. Motte, R., Galv\'an-Madrid, S. Bontemps, Y. Pouteau, A. Ginsburg, T. Csengeri, J. Di, Francesco, P. Dell'Ova, M. Gonz\'alez, P. Didelon, J. Braine, N. Cunningham,, B. Thomasson, P. Lesaffre, P. Hennebelle, M. Bonfand

TL;DR
This study measures the core mass function in 15 high-mass star-forming regions using ALMA, finding a flatter slope than the Salpeter IMF, which suggests potential variations in the stellar initial mass function in these environments.
Contribution
It provides the largest, self-consistent measurement of the core mass function in high-mass protoclusters with detailed physical properties, challenging the universality of the IMF.
Findings
Core mass function slope is 1.97, flatter than Salpeter's 2.35.
High-mass protoclusters may produce atypical IMFs.
Largest sample with matched resolution and temperature estimates.
Abstract
The stellar initial mass function (IMF) is critical to our understanding of star formation and the effects of young stars on their environment. On large scales, it enables us to use tracers such as UV or Halpha emission to estimate the star formation rate of a system and interpret unresolved star clusters across the universe. So far, there is little firm evidence of large-scale variations of the IMF, which is thus generally considered universal. Stars form from cores and it is now possible to estimate core masses and compare the core mass function (CMF) with the IMF, which it presumably produces. The goal of the ALMA-IMF large program is to measure the core mass function at high linear resolution (2700 au) in 15 typical Milky Way protoclusters spanning a mass range of 2500 to 32700 Msun. In this work, we used two different core extraction algorithms to extract about 680 gravitationally…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
