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Journal ArticleDOI

The Initial Mass Function and Massive Star Evolution in the OB Associations of the Northern Milky Way

TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigated the massive star content of Milky Way clusters and OB associations in order to answer three questions: (1) how coeval is star formation, (2) How constant is the initial mass function (IMF), and (3) What is the progenitor mass of Wolf-Rayet stars.
Abstract
We investigate the massive star content of Milky Way clusters and OB associations in order to answer three questions: (1) How coeval is star formation? (2) How constant is the initial mass function (IMF)? (3) What is the progenitor mass of Wolf-Rayet stars? Our sample includes NGC 6823/Vul OB1, NGC 6871/Cyg OB3, Berkeley 86/Cyg OB1, NGC 6983/Cyg OB1, NGC 7235, NGC 7380/Cep OB1, Cep OB5, IC 1805/Gas OB6, NGC 1893/Aug OB2, and NGC 2244/Mon OB2. Large-field CCD imaging and multiobject, fiber spectroscopy has resulted in UBV photometry for >14000 stars and new spectral types for approximate to 200 stars. These data are used to redetermine distances and reddenings for these regions and to help exclude probable nonmembers in constructing the H-R diagrams. We reanalyze comparable data previously published on Cyg OB2, Tr 14/16, and NGC 6611 and use all of these to paint a picture of star formation and to measure the IMFs. We find the following: (1) Most of the massive stars are born during a period Delta tau 7 M. A comparison with similarly studied OB associations in the Magellanic Clouds reveals no difference in IMF slope, and hence we conclude that starformation of massive stars in clusters proceeds independently of metallicity, at least between z = 0.02 and z = 0.002. The masses of the highest mass stars are approximately equal in the Milky Way, LMC, and SMC associations, contrary to the expectation that this value should vary by a factor of 3 over this metallicity range. We conclude that radiation pressure on grains must not limit the mass of the highest mass star that can form, in accord with the suggestion of Wolfire & Cassinelli that the mere existence of massive stars suggests that shocks or other mechanisms have disrupted grains in star-forming events. (3) The four Wolf-Rayet stars in our sample have come from stars more massive than 40 M.; one WC star and one late-type WN star each appear to have come from very massive (approximate to 100 M.) progenitors.

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Journal ArticleDOI

On the variation of the initial mass function

TL;DR: In this paper, the uncertainty inherent in any observational estimate of the IMF is investigated by studying the scatter introduced by Poisson noise and the dynamical evolution of star clusters, and it is found that this apparent scatter reproduces quite well the observed scatter in power-law index determinations, thus defining the fundamental limit within which any true variation becomes undetectable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward Understanding Massive Star Formation

TL;DR: In this article, a basic description of the collapse of a massive molecular core and a critical discussion of the three competing concepts of massive star formation are presented, including monolithic collapse in isolated cores, competitive accretion in a protocluster environment, stellar collisions and mergers in very dense systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Universal Stellar Initial Mass Function? A Critical Look at Variations

TL;DR: In this article, a review of reports of stellar initial mass function variations is presented, with a view toward whether other explanations are sufficient given the evidence, concluding that the vast majority were drawn from a universal system IMF: a power law of Salpeter index (Γ = 1.35) above a few solar masses, and a log normal or shallower power law (∆ ∼ 0.25) for lower mass stars.
Journal ArticleDOI

A universal radio-X-ray correlation in low/hard state black hole binaries

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a comprehensive study of (quasi-)simultaneous radio-X-ray observations of stellar black hole binaries during the spectrally hard X-ray state, finding evidence for a strong correlation between these two bands over more than three orders of magnitude in X-Ray luminosity.
Journal ArticleDOI

The VIIth catalogue of galactic Wolf–Rayet stars

TL;DR: The VIIth catalogue of galactic Population-I Wolf-Rayet stars as mentioned in this paper provides improved coordinates, spectral types and bv photometry of known WR stars and adds 71 new WR stars to the previous catalogue, including 15 WNL and 11 WCL stars within 30 pc of the Galactic Center.
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