two tails of a distribution : the initial mass functions of extreme star formation

31
Courtesy Jason Harris, Steward Observatory Functions of Extreme Star Formation Michael R. Meyer Steward Observatory The University of Arizona with Julia Greissl, Morten Andersen, and Alan Aversa

Upload: serge

Post on 11-Jan-2016

28 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of Extreme Star Formation. Michael R. Meyer Steward Observatory The University of Arizona with Julia Greissl, Morten Andersen, and Alan Aversa. Courtesy Jason Harris, Steward Observatory. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Courtesy Jason Harris, Steward Observatory

Two Tails of a Distribution:The Initial Mass Functions of Extreme Star Formation

Michael R. Meyer

Steward Observatory

The University of Arizona

with Julia Greissl, Morten Andersen,

and Alan Aversa

Page 2: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Stellar Initial Mass Function (Chabrier, 2003; Kroupa, 2001)

Page 3: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Chabrier (2003) Initial Mass Function for unresolved binaries plotted in linear units.

Page 4: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

No local variations in stellar IMF (e.g. Meyer et al. 2000).

Page 5: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

What about the sub-stellar IMF ? cf. Luhman et al. PPV (2007)

Page 6: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

HST/NICMOS Observations of Mon R2:Multi-Color Photometry and H2O Filter

Andersen, Meyer, Oppenheimer, Dougados, and Carpenter (2006)

Page 7: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

H-R Diagrams for Sub-stellar Objects in NGC 1333

Greissl, Meyer, Wilking, Fanetti, Greene, Schneider, Young (2007)

*

Page 8: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Bottom Line: The Sub-stellar IMF is falling! (cf. Allen et al. 2005)

Where dN/dm ~ M-

0.0 > > -2.3(with 90 % C.I.)

Brown dwarfs do not outnumber stars.

Meyer et al. (in prep)

Page 9: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Spatial Variations in the Ratio of Stars to Sub-stellar Objects?

The HST Orion Treasury Program(Robberto et al.)

Page 10: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Color-Magnitude Diagrams as a Function of Cluster Radius

0 1 2 3 (J-H) 0 1 2 3

Andersen et al. (in prep)

R=0.6-1.0 pc R=1-2 pc R=2.2-2.9 pc

MH

Page 11: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Color-Magnitude Diagrams as a Function of Cluster Radius

0 1 2 3 (J-H) 0 1 2 3

Andersen et al. (in prep)

R=0.6-1.0 pc R=1-2 pc R=2.2-2.9 pc

MH

Stars

Sub-stellar

Page 12: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

No strong radial variation in IMF detected in Orion.

N(0

.01-

1.0

Mo)

/N(0

.02-

0.08

Mo)

1

2

3

4

0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 Radius (parsecs)

Andersen et al. (in prep)

Page 13: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Is the IMF different in super-star clusters?

Page 14: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Unresolved Super Star Clusters in NGC 4038/4039

Mengel et al. (2002)

***

*

*

***

*

*

*

* *

* *

***

*

**

*

Page 15: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Meyer & Greissl (2005); Greissl et al. (2007)

Integrated Spectra of Super-star Clusters:Can distinguish Chabrier (2003) from Salpeter (1955)

Page 16: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

What is going on?

Siess et al. (2000); Ali et al. (1995)

CaI+CO(2-0)< 0.5 Msun

MgI > 1.0 Msun

1 Myr isochrone

Page 17: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Greissl, Meyer, Christopher, & Scoville (2007)See Poster this session!

IMF in Antennae Very Young SSC #6 Consistent with Chabrier (2003) IMF

Page 18: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

“UD” HII Regions (Proto-SSCs)

Johnson et al. (2001)

12”

Page 19: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Conspectus

1) The sub-stellar IMF in young clusters is consistent with field and a turnover below 0.1 Mo! (Meyer et al. 2007).

2) No strong evidence for radial variation in ratio of stars to sub-stellar objects in Orion between 0.8-1.8 parsecs

(Andersen et al. 2007).

3) Preliminary results suggest IMF in very young Antennae super-star clusters consistent with field star IMF

(Greissl, Meyer, Christopher, & Scoville, 2007).

Page 20: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

The Search for Variations: A Six-Parameter IMF

1. Mean Mass

2. Variance

3. High Mass Break

4. High Mass Slope

5. Sub-stellar Break

6. Sub-stellar Slope

-2 -1 0 1 2 log[M*/Mo]

lo

g[N

*]

Page 21: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Epilogue 1) Need surveys for the sub-stellar IMF down below minimum mass for

fragmentation. Will require surface gravity information (multi-object near-IR spectra) to sort out background stars (Gorlova et al. 2003; Mohanty et al. 2004) and kinematic studies to probe dynamics.

2) Determine companion mass ratio distribution as a function of primary star mass/separation down to planetary mass regime (e.g. Joergens, 2006; Metchev & Hillenbrand, 2005; Apai et al.). Could this help discern the difference between brown dwarfs and planets?

3) Surveys for ratio of high to low mass stars as a function of [Fe/H], B-field, and ISM pressure in Milky Way and local group galaxies (Andersen et al., Meyer et al.) to search for variations in Jeans Mass.

4) Further modelling of integrated light in ultra-compact HII regions in M33 ([Fe/H] vs. Galactocentric radius) and very young Super-Star Clusters in starburst galaxies (J. Greissl, PhD thesis @ UofA).

Page 22: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

NICMOS Color-Magnitude Diagram for NGC 1333

Greissl, Meyer, Wilking, Fanetti, Greene, Scheider, Young (2007)

Page 23: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Ratio of Stars to Sub-stellar Objects in NGC 1333

Greissl, Meyer, Wilking, Fanetti, Greene, Scheider, Young (2007)

Page 24: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Results

0.000.990.0110 MyrCh03K

0.000.990.0110 MyrCh03H

0.000.990.0110 MyrCh03J

0.730.230.043 MyrCh03K

0.580.370.053 MyrCh03H

0.520.440.043 MyrCh03J

0.860.070.071 MyrCh03K

0.760.140.101 MyrCh03H

0.730.180.091 MyrCh03J

0.810.070.121 MyrS55K

0.700.1250.1751 MyrS55H

0.700.170.131 MyrS55J

F_NEBF_MSF_PMSAgeIMFBand

Page 25: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Ca Mg CO(2-0)

3 Myr

1 Myr

3 Myr

1 Myr

Age

6.44 +/- 0.30Ch03

6.27 +/- 0.44Ch03

11.01 +/- 0.44S55

8.98 +/- 0.82S55

EW(CaI + CO(2-0))/EW(MgI)

IMF

S55 1 Myr

S55 3 Myr

Ch03 1 Myr

Ch03 3Myr

Page 26: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

MMT-AO Engineering PSF Simulated Trapezium Observations R(Sky Noise) = 1 Rc = 0.2 pc from Close et al. 2003. using Hillenbrand & Carpenter (2000). Hcomp(at Rc) < 24 mag

R(sky noise) = 2.5 Rc = 0.5 pc R(Sky Noise) = 4 Rc = 0.8 pc R(Sky Noise) > 20 Rc = 4-5 pc Hcomp(at Rc) < 17.8 mag. Hcomp(at Rc) < 15.3 mags. Core Radius not resolved.

25 kpc 50 kpc 0.5 Mpc

5 kpcPSF 0.5 kpc

The Trapezium on the Bleeding Edge: Sensitivity vs. Confusion...

Page 27: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Narrow-band Filters Provide Estimates of Teff

Andersen et al. (2006)

Page 28: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

J-H versus J CMD for MonR2

Page 29: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

Ratio of “low mass stars ” to brown dwarfs

Andersen et al. 2006, AJ

Page 30: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

The similar ratio for other regions

Mon R2: 8.5+-6.4

Taurus: 6.9+-2.0

IC348: 11.6+-3.4

Orion: 4.3+-0.6

Chabrier:4.3All measurements within

2sigma of each other

Page 31: Two Tails of a Distribution : The Initial Mass Functions of  Extreme Star Formation

To understand chemical evolution. Interpret the integrated light of other galaxies. Constrain contribution to baryonic dark matter

The shape of the initial mass function provide crucial information concerning the origins of stellar masses.

● Are there characteristic masses?● Is the IMF truly universal?

Prologue: Why Study the IMF?