We investigate the mass function of cold, dusty clumps in 11 low- and high-mass star-forming regions. Using a homogeneous fitting technique, we analyze the shape of each region's clump mass function and examine the commonalities among them. We find that the submillimeter continuum clump mass function in low-mass star-forming regions is typically best fit by a lognormal distribution, while that in high-mass star-forming regions is better fit by a double power law. A single power law clump mass distribution is ruled out in all cases. Fitting all of the regions with a double power law, we find the mean power law exponent at the high-mass end of each mass function is alpha_high = -2.4+/-0.1, consistent with the Salpeter result of alpha = -2.35....
Context. Fragmentation and feedback are two important processes during the early phases of star form...
Understanding the processes that determine the stellar initial mass function (IMF) is a critical uns...
We present the properties of eight star-forming regions, or ‘clumps,’ in three galaxies at z ∼ 1.3 f...
The mass function of molecular cloud clumps and cores is widely used to compare the results of numer...
International audienceContext. Stars form in dense, dusty clumps of molecular clouds, but little is ...
Context. Stars form in dense, dusty clumps of molecular clouds, but little is known about their orig...
Context. The question how the initial conditions in a star-forming region affect the resulting mass ...
Recent studies of dense clumps/cores in a number of regions of low-mass star formation have shown th...
One possible mechanism for the formation of molecular clouds is large-scale colliding flows. In this...
This is the final version. Available from EDP Sciences via the DOI in this record.Context. Fragmenta...
Context. The details of the process of massive star formation are still elusive. A complet...
Context. Stars form in dense, dusty clumps of molecular clouds, but little is known about ...
The physical processes behind the transfer of mass from parsec-scale clumps to massive star-forming ...
Context. Fragmentation and feedback are two important processes during the early phases of star form...
The topic of the stellar “original mass function” has a nearly 50 year history, dating to the public...
Context. Fragmentation and feedback are two important processes during the early phases of star form...
Understanding the processes that determine the stellar initial mass function (IMF) is a critical uns...
We present the properties of eight star-forming regions, or ‘clumps,’ in three galaxies at z ∼ 1.3 f...
The mass function of molecular cloud clumps and cores is widely used to compare the results of numer...
International audienceContext. Stars form in dense, dusty clumps of molecular clouds, but little is ...
Context. Stars form in dense, dusty clumps of molecular clouds, but little is known about their orig...
Context. The question how the initial conditions in a star-forming region affect the resulting mass ...
Recent studies of dense clumps/cores in a number of regions of low-mass star formation have shown th...
One possible mechanism for the formation of molecular clouds is large-scale colliding flows. In this...
This is the final version. Available from EDP Sciences via the DOI in this record.Context. Fragmenta...
Context. The details of the process of massive star formation are still elusive. A complet...
Context. Stars form in dense, dusty clumps of molecular clouds, but little is known about ...
The physical processes behind the transfer of mass from parsec-scale clumps to massive star-forming ...
Context. Fragmentation and feedback are two important processes during the early phases of star form...
The topic of the stellar “original mass function” has a nearly 50 year history, dating to the public...
Context. Fragmentation and feedback are two important processes during the early phases of star form...
Understanding the processes that determine the stellar initial mass function (IMF) is a critical uns...
We present the properties of eight star-forming regions, or ‘clumps,’ in three galaxies at z ∼ 1.3 f...