Bibcode
DOI
Kroupa, Pavel; Weidner, Carsten
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 598, Issue 2, pp. 1076-1078.
Advertised on:
12
2003
Journal
Citations
458
Refereed citations
398
Description
Over the past years observations of young and populous star clusters
have shown that the stellar initial mass function (IMF) appears to be an
invariant featureless Salpeter power law with an exponent α=2.35
for stars more massive than a few Msolar. A consensus has
also emerged that most, if not all, stars form in stellar groups and
star clusters and that the mass function of young star clusters in the
solar neighborhood and in interacting galaxies can be described, over
the mass range of a few 10 to 107Msolar, as a
power law with an exponent β~2. These two results imply that
galactic-field IMFs for early-type stars cannot, under any
circumstances, be a Salpeter power law, but that they must have a
steeper exponent, αfield>~2.8. This has important
consequences for the distribution of stellar remnants and for the
chemodynamical and photometric evolution of galaxies.