Bibcode
Weidner, C.; Kroupa, P.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 348, Issue 1, pp. 187-191.
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2
2004
Citations
240
Refereed citations
188
Description
The observed masses of the most massive stars do not surpass about 150
Msolar. This may either be a fundamental upper mass limit
which is defined by the physics of massive stars and/or their formation,
or it may simply reflect the increasing sparsity of such very massive
stars, so that the observation of even higher mass stars becomes
unlikely in the Galaxy and the Magellanic Clouds. It is shown here that
if the stellar initial mass function (IMF) is a power law with a
Salpeter exponent (α= 2.35) for massive stars then the richest
very young cluster R136 seen in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) should
contain stars with masses larger than 750 Msolar. If,
however, the IMF is formulated by consistently incorporating a
fundamental upper mass limit then the observed upper mass limit is
arrived at readily even if the IMF is invariant. An explicit down-turn
or cut-off of the IMF near 150 Msolar is not required: our
formulation of the problem contains this implicitly. We are therefore
led to conclude that a fundamental maximum stellar mass near 150
Msolar exists, unless the true IMF has α > 2.8.