4.7 Article

The necessity of feedback physics in setting the peak of the initial mass function

期刊

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stw315

关键词

turbulence; stars: formation; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: star formation; cosmology: theory

资金

  1. Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship
  2. NASA ATP Grant [NNX14AH35G, NNX15AT06G]
  3. NSF Collaborative Research Grant [1411920]
  4. NSF CAREER grant [1455342]
  5. NSF [AST-0955300, AST-1405962, TG-AST130039]
  6. NSF MRI award [PHY-0960291]
  7. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  8. Division Of Astronomical Sciences [1411920] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  9. NASA [801688, NNX15AT06G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

向作者/读者索取更多资源

A popular theory of star formation is gravito-turbulent fragmentation, in which self-gravitating structures are created by turbulence-driven density fluctuations. Simple theories of isothermal fragmentation successfully reproduce the core mass function (CMF) which has a very similar shape to the initial mass function (IMF) of stars. However, numerical simulations of isothermal turbulent fragmentation thus far have not succeeded in identifying a fragment mass scale that is independent of the simulation resolution. Moreover, the fluid equations for magnetized, self-gravitating, isothermal turbulence are scale-free, and do not predict any characteristic mass. In this paper we show that, although an isothermal self-gravitating flow does produce a CMF with a mass scale imposed by the initial conditions, this scale changes as the parent cloud evolves. In addition, the cores that form undergo further fragmentation and after sufficient time forget about their initial conditions, yielding a scale-free pure power-law distribution dN/dM proportional to M-2 for the stellar IMF. We show that this problem can be alleviated by introducing additional physics that provides a termination scale for the cascade. Our candidate for such physics is a simple model for stellar radiation feedback. Radiative heating, powered by accretion on to forming stars, arrests the fragmentation cascade and imposes a characteristic mass scale that is nearly independent of the time-evolution or initial conditions in the star-forming cloud, and that agrees well with the peak of the observed IMF. In contrast, models that introduce a stiff equation of state for denser clouds but that do not explicitly include the effects of feedback do not yield an invariant IMF.

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