As most if not all stars are born in stellar clusters the shape of the mass
function of the field stars is not only determined by the initial mass function
of stars (IMF) but also by the cluster mass function (CMF). In order to
quantify this Monte-Carlo simulations were carried out by taking cluster masses
randomly from a CMF and then populating these clusters with stars randomly
taken from an IMF. Two cases were studied. Firstly the star masses were added
randomly until the cluster mass was reached. Secondly a number of stars, given
by the cluster mass divided by an estimate of the mean stellar mass and sorted
by mass, were added until the desired cluster mass was reached. Both
experiments verified the analytical results of Kroupa & Weidner (2003) that the
resulting integrated stellar initial mass function is a folding of the IMF with
the CMF and therefore steeper than the input IMF above 1 Msol.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, uses kapproc.cls. Contributed poster presented at
the conference on "IMF@50: The Stellar Initial Mass Function Fifty Years
Later" held at Abbazia di Spineto, Siena, Italy, May 2004. To be published by
Kluwer Academic Publishers, ed. E. Corbelli, F. Palla, and H. Zinnecke