Understanding the Stellar Initial Mass Function

Richard B. Larson


(1) Department of Astronomy, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.

Paper: Revista Mexicana de Astronomia y Astrofisica,

Weblink: http://www.astro.yale.edu/larson/papers/Pucon05.pdf.


Abstract:

The essential features of the stellar Initial Mass Function are, rather generally, (1) a peak at mass of a few tenths of a solar mass, and (2) a power-law tail toward higher masses that is similar to the original Salpeter function. Recent work suggests that the IMF peak reflects a preferred scale of fragmentation associated with the transition from a cooling phase of collapse at low densities to a nearly isothermal phase at higher densities, where the gas becomes thermally coupled to the dust. The Salpeter power law is plausibly produced, at least in part, by scale-free accretion processes that build up massive stars in dense environments. The young stars at the Galactic Center appear to have unusually high masses, possibly because of a high minimum mass resulting from the high opacity of the dense star-forming gas.


Preprints available from the authors at richard.larson@yale.edu , or the raw TeX (no figures) if you click here.

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