An Initial Mass Function for Individual Stars in Galactic Disks: I. Constraining the Shape of the IMF
arXiv:1010.2452 · doi:10.1088/0004-637X/726/1/27
Abstract
We derive a semi-empirical galactic initial mass function (IMF) from observational constraints. We assume that the star formation rate in a galaxy can be expressed as the product of the IMF, $Ï(m)$, which is a smooth function of mass $m$ (in units of \msun), and a time- and space-dependent total rate of star formation per unit area of galactic disk. The mass dependence of the proposed IMF is determined by five parameters: the low-mass slope $γ$, the high-mass slope $-Î$, the characteristic mass $m_{ch}$ (which is close to the mass $m_{\rm peak}$ at which the IMF turns over), and the lower and upper limits on the mass, $m_l$ (taken to be 0.004) and $m_u$ (taken to be 120). The star formation rate in terms of number of stars per unit area of galactic disk per unit logarithmic mass interval, is proportional to $m^{-Î} \left\{1-\exp\left[{-(m/m_{ch})^{γ+Î}}\right]\right\}$, where $\cal N_*$ is the number of stars, $m_l<m<m_u$ is the range of stellar masses. The values of $γ$ and $\emch$ are derived from two integral constraints: i) the ratio of the number density of stars in the range $m=0.1-0.6$ to that in the range $m=0.6-0.8$ as inferred from the mass distribution of field stars in the local neighborhood, and ii) the ratio of the number of stars in the range $m=0.08 - 1$ to the number of brown dwarfs in the range $m=0.03-0.08$ in young clusters. The IMF satisfying the above constraints is characterized by the parameters $γ=0.51$ and $\emch=0.35$ (which corresponds to $m_{\rm peak}=0.27$). This IMF agrees quite well with the Chabrier (2005) IMF for the entire mass range over which we have compared with data, but predicts significantly more stars with masses $< 0.03\, M_\odot$; we also compare with other IMFs in current use.
46 pages, 8 figures, submitted to ApJ