Friday, June 28, 2013

1306.6332 (Carsten Weidner et al.)

The (galaxy-wide) IMF in giant elliptical galaxies: From top to bottom    [PDF]

Carsten Weidner, Ignacio Ferreras, Alexandre Vazdekis, Francesco La Barbera
Recent evidence based independently on spectral line strengths and dynamical modelling point towards a non-universal stellar Initial Mass Function (IMF), implying an excess of low-mass stars in the most massive elliptical galaxies. Here we show that a time-independent bottom-heavy IMF is compatible neither with the observed metal-rich populations found in giant ellipticals nor with the number of stellar remnants observed within these systems. We suggest a two-stage formation scenario involving a time-dependent IMF to reconcile these observational constraints. In this model, an early strong star-bursting stage with a top-heavy IMF is followed by a more prolonged stage with a bottom-heavy IMF. Such model is physically motivated by the fact that a sustained high star formation will bring the interstellar medium to a state of pressure, temperature and turbulence that can drastically alter the fragmentation of the gaseous component into small clumps, promoting the formation of low-mass stars. This toy model is in good agreement with the different observational constrains on massive elliptical galaxies, such as age, metallicity, alpha-enhancement, M/L, or the mass fraction of the stellar component in low-mass stars.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1306.6332

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