Abstract
We examine the cosmic evolution of a stellar initial mass function (IMF)
in galaxies that varies with the Jeans mass in the interstellar medium,
paying particular attention to the K-band stellar mass-to-light ratio
(M/LK) of present-epoch massive galaxies. We calculate the
typical Jeans mass using high-resolution hydrodynamic simulations
coupled with a fully radiative model for the interstellar medium (ISM),
which yields a parametrization of the IMF characteristic mass as a
function of galaxy star formation rate (SFR). We then calculate the star
formation histories of galaxies utilizing an equilibrium galaxy growth
model coupled with constraints on the star formation histories set by
abundance matching models. We find that at early times, energetic
coupling between dust and gas drives warm conditions in the ISM,
yielding bottom-light/top-heavy IMFs associated with large ISM Jeans
masses for massive star-forming galaxies. Owing to the remnants of
massive stars that formed during the top-heavy phases at early times,
the resultant M/LK(σ) in massive galaxies at the
present epoch is increased relative to the non-varying IMF case. At late
times, lower cosmic ray fluxes allow for cooler ISM temperatures in
massive galaxies, and hence newly formed clusters will exhibit
bottom-heavy IMFs, further increasing M/LK(σ). Our
central result is hence that a given massive galaxy may go through both
top-heavy and bottom-heavy IMF phases during its lifetime, though the
bulk of the stars form during a top-heavy phase. Qualitatively, the
variations in M/LK(σ) with galaxy mass are in agreement
with observations; however, our model may not be able to account for
bottom-heavy mass functions as indicated by stellar absorption features.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 2892-2906 |
Journal | Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society |
Volume | 436 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 21 Oct 2013 |
Keywords
- stars: formation
- stars: luminosity function
- mass function
- galaxies: formation
- galaxies: high-redshift
- galaxies: ISM
- galaxies: starburst
- cosmology: theory