ALMA-IMF III. Investigating the origin of stellar masses: top-heavy core mass function in the W43-MM2&MM3 mini-starburst

Pouteau, Y.; Motte, F.; Nony, T.; Galvan-Madrid, R.; Men'shchikov, A.; Bontemps, S.; Robitaille, J. -F.; Louvet, F.; Ginsburg, A.; Herpin, F.; Lopez-Sepulcre, A.; Dell'Ova, P.; Gusdorf, A.; Sanhueza, P.; Stutz, A. M.; et. al.

Abstract

--- - Aims. The processes that determine the stellar initial mass function (IMF) and its origin are critical unsolved problems, with profound implications for many areas of astrophysics. The W43-MM2&MM3 mini-starburst ridge hosts a rich young protocluster, from which it is possible to test the current paradigm on the IMF origin. - Methods. The ALMA-IMF Large Program observed the W43-MM2&MM3 ridge, whose 1.3 mm and 3 mm ALMA 12 m array continuum images reach a similar to 2500 au spatial resolution. We used both the best-sensitivity and the line-free ALMA-IMF images, reduced the noise with the multi-resolution segmentation technique MnGSeg, and derived the most complete and most robust core catalog possible. Using two different extraction software packages, getsf and GExt2D, we identified similar to 200 compact sources, whose similar to 100 common sources have, on average, fluxes consistent to within 30%. We filtered sources with non-negligible free-free contamination and corrected fluxes from line contamination, resulting in a W43-MM2&MM3 catalog of 205 getsf cores. With a median deconvolved FWHM size of 3400 au, core masses range from similar to 0.1 M-circle dot to similar to 70 M-circle dot and the getsf catalog is 90% complete down to 0:8 M-circle dot. - Results. The high-mass end of the core mass function (CMF) of W43-MM2&MM3 is top-heavy compared to the canonical IMF. Fitting the cumulative CMF with a single power-law of the form N(> log M) / Mff, we measured alpha= -0:95 +/- 0:04, compared to the canonical alpha = -1 :35 Salpeter IMF slope. The slope of the CMF is robust with respect to map processing, extraction software packages, and reasonable variations in the assumptions taken to estimate core masses. We explore several assumptions on how cores transfer their mass to stars (assuming a mass conversion efficiency) and subfragment (defining a core fragment mass function) to predict the IMF resulting from the W43-MM2&MM3 CMF. While core mass growth should flatten the high-mass end of the resulting IMF, core fragmentation could steepen it. - Conclusions. In stark contrast to the commonly accepted paradigm, our result argues against the universality of the CMF shape. More robust functions of the star formation efficiency and core subfragmentation are required to better predict the resulting IMF, here suggested to remain top-heavy at the end of the star formation phase. If confirmed, the IMFs emerging from starburst events could inherit their top-heavy shape from their parental CMFs, challenging the IMF universality.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000835949500013 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volumen: 664
Editorial: EDP SCIENCES S A
Fecha de publicación: 2022
DOI:

10.1051/0004-6361/202142951

Notas: ISI