201 research outputs found
Enhanced tidal stripping of satellites in the galactic halo from dark matter self-interactions
We investigate the effects of self-interacting dark matter (SIDM) on the
tidal stripping and evaporation of satellite galaxies in a Milky Way-like host.
We use a suite of five zoom-in, dark-matter-only simulations, two with
velocity-independent SIDM cross sections, two with velocity-dependent SIDM
cross sections, and one cold dark matter simulation for comparison. After
carefully assigning stellar mass to satellites at infall, we find that stars
are stripped at a higher rate in SIDM than in CDM. In contrast, the total bound
dark matter mass loss rate is minimally affected, with subhalo evaporation
having negligible effects on satellites for viable SIDM models. Centrally
located stars in SIDM haloes disperse out to larger radii as cores grow.
Consequently, the half-light radius of satellites increases, stars become more
vulnerable to tidal stripping, and the stellar mass function is suppressed. We
find that the ratio of core radius to tidal radius accurately predicts the
relative strength of enhanced SIDM stellar stripping. Velocity-independent SIDM
models show a modest increase in the stellar stripping effect with satellite
mass, whereas velocity-dependent SIDM models show a large increase in this
effect towards lower masses, making observations of ultra-faint dwarfs prime
targets for distinguishing between and constraining SIDM models. Due to small
cores in the largest satellites of velocity-dependent SIDM, no identifiable
imprint is left on the all-sky properties of the stellar halo. While our
results focus on SIDM, the main physical mechanism of enhanced tidal stripping
of stars apply similarly to satellites with cores formed via other means.Comment: 19 pages, 18 figures, Accepted by MNRA
Influence of Population III stars on cosmic chemical evolution
New observations from the Hubble ultra deep field suggest that the star
formation rate at z>7 drops off faster than previously thought. Using a newly
determined star formation rate for the normal mode of Population II/I stars
(PopII/I), including this new constraint, we compute the Thomson scattering
optical depth and find a result that is marginally consistent with WMAP5
results. We also reconsider the role of Population III stars (PopIII) in light
of cosmological and stellar evolution constraints. While this input may be
needed for reionization, we show that it is essential in order to account for
cosmic chemical evolution in the early Universe. We investigate the
consequences of PopIII stars on the local metallicity distribution function of
the Galactic halo (from the recent Hamburg/ESO survey of metal-poor stars) and
on the evolution of abundances with metallicity (based on the ESO large program
on very metal-poor stars), with special emphasis on carbon-enhanced metal-poor
stars. Our most important results show that the nucleosynthetic yields of
PopIII stars lead to abundance patterns in agreement with those observed in
extremely metal-poor stars. In this chemical approach to cosmic evolution,
PopIII stars prove to be a compulsory ingredient, and extremely metal-poor
stars are inevitably born at high redshift. (Abridged)Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, MNRAS in pres
Exploring the Universe with Metal-Poor Stars
The early chemical evolution of the Galaxy and the Universe is vital to our
understanding of a host of astrophysical phenomena. Since the most metal-poor
Galactic stars (with metallicities down to [Fe/H]\sim-5.5) are relics from the
high-redshift Universe, they probe the chemical and dynamical conditions of the
Milky Way and the origin and evolution of the elements through nucleosynthesis.
They also provide constraints on the nature of the first stars, their
associated supernovae and initial mass function, and early star and galaxy
formation. The Milky Way's dwarf satellites contain a large fraction (~30%) of
the known most metal-poor stars that have chemical abundances that closely
resemble those of equivalent halo stars. This suggests that chemical evolution
may be universal, at least at early times, and that it is driven by massive,
energetic SNe. Some of these surviving, ultra-faint systems may show the
signature of just one such PopIII star; they may even be surviving first
galaxies. Early analogs of the surviving dwarfs may thus have played an
important role in the assembly of the old Galactic halo whose formation can now
be studied with stellar chemistry. Following the cosmic evolution of small
halos in simulations of structure formation enables tracing the cosmological
origin of the most metal-poor stars in the halo and dwarf galaxies. Together
with future observations and additional modeling, many of these issues,
including the reionization history of the Milky Way, may be constrained this
way. The chapter concludes with an outlook about upcoming observational
challenges and ways forward is to use metal-poor stars to constrain theoretical
studies.Comment: 34 pages, 11 figures. Book chapter to appear in "The First Galaxies -
Theoretical Predictions and Observational Clues", 2012 by Springer, eds. V.
Bromm, B. Mobasher, T. Wiklin
The stellar content of the Hamburg/ESO survey VI. The metallicity distribution of main-sequence turnoff stars in the Galactic halo
We determine the metallicity distribution function (MDF) of the Galactic halo
based on metal-poor main-sequence turnoff-stars (MSTO) which were selected from
the Hamburg/ESO objective-prism survey (HES) database. Corresponding follow-up
moderateresolution observations (R ~ 2000) of some 682 stars (among which 617
were accepted program stars) were carried out with the 2.3m telescope at the
Siding Spring Observatory (SSO). Corrections for the survey volume covered by
the sample stars were quantitatively estimated and applied to the observed MDF.
The corrections are quite small, when compared with those for a previously
studied sample of metal-poor giants. The corrected observational MDF of the
turnoff sample was then compared with that of the giants, as well as with a
number of theoretical predictions of Galactic chemical evolution, including the
mass-loss modified Simple Model. Although the survey-volume corrected MDFs of
the metal-poor turnoff and the halo giants notably differ in the region of
[Fe/H] > -2.0, below [Fe/H] ~ -2.0, (the region we scientifically focus on
most) both MDFs show a sharp drop at [Fe/H] ~ -3.6 and present rather similar
distributions in the low-metallicity tail. Theoretical models can fit some
parts of the observed MDF, but none is found to simultaneously reproduce the
peak as well as the features in the metal-poor region with [Fe/H] between -2.0
to -3.6. Among the tested models only the GAMETE model, when normalized to the
tail of the observed MDF below [Fe/H] ~ -3.0, and with Z_{cr} =
10^{-3.4}Z_{\odot}, is able to predict the sharp drop at [Fe/H] ~ -3.6.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The First Supernova Explosions: Energetics, Feedback, and Chemical Enrichment
We perform three-dimensional smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations in a
realistic cosmological setting to investigate the expansion, feedback, and
chemical enrichment properties of a 200 M_sun pair-instability supernova in the
high-redshift universe. We find that the SN remnant propagates for a Hubble
time at z = 20 to a final mass-weighted mean shock radius of 2.5 kpc (proper),
roughly half the size of the HII region, and in this process sweeps up a total
gas mass of 2.5*10^5 M_sun. The morphology of the shock becomes highly
anisotropic once it leaves the host halo and encounters filaments and
neighboring minihalos, while the bulk of the shock propagates into the voids of
the intergalactic medium. The SN entirely disrupts the host halo and terminates
further star formation for at least 200 Myr, while in our specific case it
exerts positive mechanical feedback on neighboring minihalos by
shock-compressing their cores. In contrast, we do not observe secondary star
formation in the dense shell via gravitational fragmentation, due to the
previous photoheating by the progenitor star. We find that cooling by metal
lines is unimportant for the entire evolution of the SN remnant, while the
metal-enriched, interior bubble expands adiabatically into the cavities created
by the shock, and ultimately into the voids with a maximum extent similar to
the final mass-weighted mean shock radius. Finally, we conclude that dark
matter halos of at least M_vir > 10^8 M_sun must be assembled to recollect all
components of the swept-up gas.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figures, published in Ap
The First Galaxies: Chemical Enrichment, Mixing, and Star Formation
Using three-dimensional cosmological simulations, we study the assembly
process of one of the first galaxies, with a total mass of 10^8 M_sun,
collapsing at z = 10. Our main goal is to trace the transport of the heavy
chemical elements produced and dispersed by a pair-instability supernova
exploding in one of the minihalo progenitors. To this extent, we incorporate an
efficient algorithm into our smoothed particle hydrodynamics code which
approximately models turbulent mixing as a diffusion process. We study this
mixing with and without the radiative feedback from Population III stars that
subsequently form in neighboring minihalos. Our simulations allow us to
constrain the initial conditions for second-generation star formation, within
the first galaxy itself, and inside of minihalos that virialize after the
supernova explosion. We find that most minihalos remain unscathed by ionizing
radiation or the supernova remnant, while some are substantially photoheated
and enriched to supercritical levels, likely resulting in the formation of
low-mass Population III or even Population II stars. At the center of the newly
formed galaxy, 10^5 M_sun of cold, dense gas uniformly enriched to 10^-3 Z_sun
are in a state of collapse, suggesting that a cluster of Population II stars
will form. The first galaxies, as may be detected by the James Webb Space
Telescope, would therefore already contain stellar populations familiar from
lower redshifts.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, published in Ap
The first stars: formation of binaries and small multiple systems
We investigate the formation of metal-free, Population III (Pop III), stars
within a minihalo at z ~ 20 with a smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH)
simulation, starting from cosmological initial conditions. Employing a
hierarchical, zoom-in procedure, we achieve sufficient numerical resolution to
follow the collapsing gas in the center of the minihalo up to number densities
of 10^12 cm^-3. This allows us to study the protostellar accretion onto the
initial hydrostatic core, which we represent as a growing sink particle, in
improved physical detail. The accretion process, and in particular its
termination, governs the final masses that were reached by the first stars. The
primordial initial mass function (IMF), in turn, played an important role in
determining to what extent the first stars drove early cosmic evolution. We
continue our simulation for 5000 yr after the first sink particle has formed.
During this time period, a disk-like configuration is assembled around the
first protostar. The disk is gravitationally unstable, develops a pronounced
spiral structure, and fragments into several other protostellar seeds. At the
end of the simulation, a small multiple system has formed, dominated by a
binary with masses ~ 40 M_Sun and ~ 10 M_Sun. If Pop III stars were to form
typically in binaries or small multiples, the standard model of primordial star
formation, where single, isolated stars are predicted to form in minihaloes,
would have to be modified. This would have crucial consequences for the
observational signature of the first stars, such as their nucleosynthetic
pattern, and the gravitational-wave emission from possible Pop III black-hole
binaries.Comment: Accepted to MNRAS. New section with new figure added. 18 pages, 13
figures. Supplementary material and high resolution version at
http://www.as.utexas.edu/~minerva
Chemical abundances of distant extremely metal-poor unevolved stars
Aims: The purpose of our study is to determine the chemical composition of a
sample of 16 candidate Extremely Metal-Poor (EMP) dwarf stars, extracted from
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). There are two main purposes: in the first
place to verify the reliability of the metallicity estimates derived from the
SDSS spectra; in the second place to see if the abundance trends found for the
brighter nearer stars studied previously also hold for this sample of fainter,
more distant stars. Methods: We used the UVES at the VLT to obtain
high-resolution spectra of the programme stars. The abundances were determined
by an automatic analysis with the MyGIsFOS code, with the exception of lithium,
for which the abundances were determined from the measured equivalent widths of
the Li I resonance doublet. Results: All candidates are confirmed to be EMP
stars, with [Fe/H]<= -3.0. The chemical composition of the sample of stars is
similar to that of brighter and nearer samples. We measured the lithium
abundance for 12 stars and provide stringent upper limits for three other
stars, for a fourth star the upper limit is not significant, owing to the low
signal-to noise ratio of the spectrum. The "meltdown" of the Spite plateau is
confirmed, but some of the lowest metallicity stars of the sample lie on the
plateau. Conclusions: The concordance of the metallicities derived from
high-resolution spectra and those estimated from the SDSS spectra suggests that
the latter may be used to study the metallicity distribution of the halo. The
abundance pattern suggests that the halo was well mixed for all probed
metallicities and distances. The fact that at the lowest metallicities we find
stars on the Spite plateau suggests that the meltdown depends on at least
another parameter, besides metallicity. (abridged)Comment: A&A in pres
A single low-energy, iron-poor supernova as the source of metals in the star SMSS J 031300.36-670839.3
The element abundance ratios of four low-mass stars with extremely low
metallicities indicate that the gas out of which the stars formed was enriched
in each case by at most a few, and potentially only one low-energy, supernova.
Such supernovae yield large quantities of light elements such as carbon but
very little iron. The dominance of low-energy supernovae is surprising, because
it has been expected that the first stars were extremely massive, and that they
disintegrated in pair-instability explosions that would rapidly enrich galaxies
in iron. What has remained unclear is the yield of iron from the first
supernovae, because hitherto no star is unambiguously interpreted as
encapsulating the yield of a single supernova. Here we report the optical
spectrum of SMSS J031300.36- 670839.3, which shows no evidence of iron (with an
upper limit of 10^-7.1 times solar abundance). Based on a comparison of its
abundance pattern with those of models, we conclude that the star was seeded
with material from a single supernova with an original mass of ~60 Mo (and that
the supernova left behind a black hole). Taken together with the previously
mentioned low-metallicity stars, we conclude that low-energy supernovae were
common in the early Universe, and that such supernovae yield light element
enrichment with insignificant iron. Reduced stellar feedback both chemically
and mechanically from low-energy supernovae would have enabled first-generation
stars to form over an extended period. We speculate that such stars may perhaps
have had an important role in the epoch of cosmic reionization and the chemical
evolution of early galaxies.Comment: 28 pages, 6 figures, Natur
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