Bibcode
Weidner, C.; Kroupa, P.; Maschberger, T.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 393, Issue 2, pp. 663-680.
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2
2009
Citations
44
Refereed citations
39
Description
The study of young stellar populations has revealed that most stars are
in binary or higher order multiple systems. In this study, the influence
on the stellar initial mass function (IMF) of large quantities of
unresolved multiple massive stars is investigated by taking into account
the stellar evolution and photometrically determined system masses. The
models, where initial masses are derived from the luminosity and colour
of unresolved multiple systems, show that even under extreme
circumstances (100 per cent binaries or higher order multiples), the
difference between the power-law index of the mass function (MF) of all
stars and the observed MF is small (<~0.1). Thus, if the observed IMF
has the Salpeter index α = 2.35, then the true stellar IMF has an
index not flatter than α = 2.25. Additionally, unresolved multiple
systems may hide between 15 and 60 per cent of the underlying true mass
of a star cluster. While already a known result, it is important to
point out that the presence of a large number of unresolved binaries
amongst pre-main-sequence stars induces a significant spread in the
measured ages of these stars even if there is none. Also, lower mass
stars in a single-age binary-rich cluster appear older than the massive
stars by about 0.6 Myr.