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		| Paper: | 
		Competitive Accretion in Sheet Geometry and the Stellar IMF | 
	 
	
		| Volume: | 
		440, UP2010: Have Observations Revealed a Variable Upper End of the Initial Mass Function? | 
	 
	
		| Page: | 
		107 | 
	 
	
		| Authors: | 
		Hsu, W.; Hartmann, L.; Heitsch, F.; Gómez, G. C. | 
	 
	
	
		| Abstract: | 
		We report a set of numerical experiments 
 addressing the applicability of competitive accretion 
 to explain the high-mass end of the stellar initial mass function
 in a sheet geometry with shallow gravitational potential, 
 in contrast to most previous simulations which have assumed formation
 in a cluster gravitational potential.
 Our flat cloud geometry is motivated by models of molecular cloud formation
 due to large-scale flows in the interstellar medium.
 The experiments consisted of smoothed particle hydrodynamics  simulations of gas accretion onto 
 sink particles formed rapidly from Jeans-unstable
 dense clumps placed randomly in
 the finite sheet. 
 We considered both clumps of
 equal mass and gaussian distributions of masses,
 and either uniform or spatially-varying gas densities.
 The sink mass function develops a power law 
 tail at high masses, with dN/dlogM ∝ M–Γ. 
 The accretion rates of individual sinks follow M ∝ M2 at high masses; this results in a continual
 flattening of the slope of the mass function 
 towards an asymptotic form Γ∼1
 (where the Salpeter slope is Γ = 1.35). 
 The asymptotic limit is most rapidly reached when starting from
 a relatively broad distribution of initial sink masses.  
 Although these simulations are highly idealized, the results suggest that
 competitive accretion may be relevant in a wider variety 
 of environments than previously considered. | 
	 
	
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