2008ApJ...675..163H


Query : 2008ApJ...675..163H

2008ApJ...675..163H - Astrophys. J., 675, 163-187 (2008/March-1)

Evidence for a nonuniversal stellar initial mass function from the integrated properties of SDSS galaxies.

HOVERSTEN E.A. and GLAZEBROOK K.

Abstract (from CDS):

This paper revisits the classical Kennicutt method for inferring the stellar IMF from the integrated light properties of galaxies. The large-size, uniform high-quality data set from the SDSS DR4 is combined with more in-depth modeling and quantitative statistical analysis to search for systematic IMF variations as a function of galaxy luminosity. Galaxy Hα equivalent widths are compared to a broadband color index to constrain the IMF. This parameter space is useful for breaking degeneracies that are traditionally problematic. Age and dust corrections are largely orthogonal to IMF variations. In addition, the effects of metallicity and smooth SFH e-folding times are small compared to IMF variations. We find that for the sample as a whole the best-fitting IMF slope above 0.5 M is Γ=1.4535, with a negligible random error of ±0.0004 and a systematic error of ±0.1. Galaxies brighter than around Mr,0.1=-20 (including galaxies like the Milky Way, which has Mr,0.1~-21) are well fitted by a universal Γ∼1.4 IMF, similar to Salpeter, and smooth, exponential SFHs. Fainter galaxies prefer steeper IMFs, and the quality of the fits reveals that for these galaxies a universal IMF with smooth SFHs is actually a poor assumption. Several sources of sample bias are ruled out as the cause of these luminosity-dependent IMF variations. Analysis of bursting SFH models shows that an implausible coordination of burst times is required to fit a universal IMF to the Mr,0.1=-17 galaxies. This leads to the conclusions that the IMF in low-luminosity galaxies has fewer massive stars, by either steeper slope or lower upper mass cutoff, and is not universal.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Galaxies: Evolution - Galaxies: Stellar Content - Stars: Luminosity Function, Mass Function

Simbad objects: 16

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Number of rows : 16
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 M 31 AGN 00 42 44.330 +41 16 07.50 4.86 4.36 3.44     ~ 12704 1
2 NAME SMC G 00 52 38.0 -72 48 01   2.79 2.2     ~ 11205 1
3 IC 1613 GiC 01 04 48.4071 +02 07 10.185   10.42 10.01 9.77   ~ 1240 2
4 M 103 OpC 01 33 21.4 +60 39 32   7.72 7.4     ~ 201 0
5 NGC 663 OpC 01 46 21 +61 12.7   7.78 7.1     ~ 255 0
6 NGC 1569 IG 04 30 49.186 +64 50 52.52 11.72 11.86 11.03     ~ 1244 3
7 NGC 1705 Sy2 04 54 13.4661493464 -53 21 39.471592428 12.32 12.96 12.56 12.58 12.9 ~ 663 1
8 NAME LMC G 05 23 34.6 -69 45 22     0.4     ~ 17514 0
9 RMC 136 Cl* 05 38 42.396 -69 06 03.36   5.81 5.40     ~ 2023 2
10 M 82 AGN 09 55 52.430 +69 40 46.93 9.61 9.30 8.41     ~ 5873 6
11 NGC 4395 Sy2 12 25 48.8633109888 +33 32 48.700168152 10.84 10.54 10.11 9.98   ~ 1188 1
12 UGCA 290 IG 12 37 21.7 +38 44 28   17       ~ 70 1
13 M 101 GiP 14 03 12.583 +54 20 55.50   8.46 7.86 7.76   ~ 2927 2
14 NAME Arches Cluster Cl* 17 45 50.5 -28 49 28           ~ 741 0
15 NGC 6822 G 19 44 56.199 -14 47 51.29   18 8.1     ~ 1567 0
16 NAME Local Group GrG ~ ~           ~ 8443 0

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