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As hosts of living high-mass stars, Wolf-Rayet (WR) regions or WR galaxies are ideal objects for constraining the high-mass end of the stellar initial mass function (IMF). We construct a large sample of 910 WR galaxies/regions that cover a wide range of stellar metallicity, by combining three catalogs of WR galaxies/regions as previously selected from the SDSS and SDSS-IV/MaNGA surveys. We measure the equivalent width of the WR blue bump at ~4650 r{A} from each spectrum, and make comparisons with predictions of both singular population models in Starburst99 and binary population models in BPASS. We have also applied a Bayesian inference code to perform full spectral fitting to the WR spectra using the singular and binary stellar population models from BPASS as spectral templates, and we make model selection for models of different IMF slopes based on the Bayesian evidence ratios. These analyses have consistently led to a positive correlation of IMF high-mass slope $alpha$ with stellar metallicity $Z$, i.e. with steeper IMF (more bottom-heavy) at higher metallicities, and the conclusion holds even when binary population models are adopted.
MaNGA provides the opportunity to make precise spatially resolved measurements of the IMF slope in galaxies owing to its unique combination of spatial resolution, wavelength coverage and sample size. We derive radial gradients in age, element abundan
We use a large sample of 174 Wolf-Rayet (WR) galaxies drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to study whether and how the slope of the stellar initial mass function depends on metallicity. We calculate for each object its oxygen abundance according
We present a study on the stellar age and metallicity distributions for 1105 galaxies using the STARLIGHT software on MaNGA integral field spectra. We derive age and metallicity gradients by fitting straight lines to the radial profiles, and explore
Wolf-Rayet (WR) galaxies are a rare population of galaxies that host living high-mass stars during their WR phase (i.e. WR stars) and are thus expected to provide interesting constraints on the stellar Initial Mass Function, massive star formation, s
By means of the fossil record method implemented through Pipe3D, we reconstruct the global and radial stellar mass growth histories (MGHs) of an unprecedentedly large sample of galaxies, ranging from dwarf to giant objects, from the Mapping Nearby Ga