ArXiv TLDR

The fragmentation properties of massive star-forming regions in 30Dor-10 at 2000 au resolution

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2604.19878

A. Traficante, M. J. Jimenez-Donaire, R. Indebetouw, T. Wong, A. Nucara + 7 more

astro-ph.GA

TLDR

High-resolution observations of 30Dor-10 in the LMC show its core mass function is Salpeter-like, suggesting stellar mass variations are evolutionary.

Key contributions

  • First study of core mass function (CMF) in an external galaxy (30Dor-10, LMC).
  • Utilizes high-resolution observations probing spatial scales down to 2000 au.
  • Robust statistical analysis reveals a Salpeter-like slope for the core mass function.
  • Suggests stellar mass distribution variations arise from evolutionary processes.

Why it matters

This paper provides the first observational constraints on the core mass function and its link to the initial mass function beyond the Milky Way. It challenges the idea that initial fragmentation alone dictates stellar mass variations, suggesting evolutionary processes play a key role. This advances our understanding of star formation and galaxy evolution.

Original Abstract

The fragmentation properties of parsec-scales clumps play a fundamental role in shaping the dense gas condensations known as cores, the immediate progenitor of stars. The distribution of core masses, the so-called core mass function, is the precursor of the stellar initial mass function, which governs the distribution of stellar masses and, consequently, the evolution of galaxies. The stellar initial mass function is often described by a typical Salpeter-like slope, although deviations toward more top-heavy distributions have been reported in extreme environments, raising questions about its universality and about the physical connection between the two mass functions. To date, there are no observational constraints on the core mass function and its link to the initial mass function beyond the Milky Way. Here we present a study of the fragmentation properties and the measurement of the core mass function in an external galaxy, focusing on the 30Dor-10 region in the Large Magellanic Cloud, using high resolution observations that probe spatial scales down to 2000 au. Robust statistical analysis demonstrates that the core mass function is consistent with a Salpeter-like slope and suggests that variations in the stellar mass distribution arise from evolutionary processes rather than from initial fragmentation.

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