The Impact of Binaries on the Stellar Initial Mass Function (1806.10605v2)
Abstract: (abridged) The stellar initial mass function (IMF) can be conveniently represented as a canonical two-part power law function and is largely invariant for star formation regions evident in the Local Group of galaxies. The IMF is a hilfskonstrukt. It is a mathematical formulation of an idealised population of stars formed together in one star formation event. The nature of the IMF (is it a probability density or an optimal sampling distribution function?) is raised. Binary stars, if unresolved, have a very significant influence at low stellar masses. Especially important is to take care of the changing binary fraction as a result of stellar-dynamical evolution of the embedded clusters which spawn the field populations of galaxies, given that the binary fraction at birth is very high and independent of primary-star mass. The high multiplicity fraction amongst massive stars leads to a substantial fraction of these being ejected out of their birth clusters and to massive stars merging. This explains the top-lightness of the IMF in star clusters in M31. In close binaries also the masses of the components can be changed due to mass transfer. A large amount of evidence points to the IMF becoming top-heavy with decreasing metallicity and above a star-formation-rate density of about 0.1 Msun/(pc3 yr) of the cluster-forming cloud core. This is also indicated through the observed supernova rates in star-bursting galaxies. At the same time, the IMF may be bottom light at low metallicity and bottom-heavy at high metallicity, possibly accounting for the results on elliptical galaxies and ultra-faint dwarf galaxies, respectively.
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