3,665 research outputs found
The chemical signature of surviving Population III stars in the Milky Way
Cosmological simulations of Population (Pop) III star formation suggest that
the primordial initial mass function may have extended to sub-solar masses. If
Pop III stars with masses < 0.8 M_Sun did form, then they should still be
present in the Galaxy today as either main sequence or red giant stars. Despite
broad searches, however, no primordial stars have yet been identified. It has
long been recognized that the initial metal-free nature of primordial stars
could be masked due to accretion of metal-enriched material from the
interstellar medium (ISM). Here we point out that while gas accretion from the
ISM may readily occur, the accretion of dust from the ISM can be prevented due
to the pressure of the radiation emitted from low-mass stars. This implies a
possible unique chemical signature for stars polluted only via accretion,
namely an enhancement in gas phase elements relative to those in the dust
phase. Using Pop III stellar models, we outline the conditions in which this
signature could be exhibited, and we derive the expected signature for the case
of accretion from the local ISM. Intriguingly, due to the large fraction of
iron depleted into dust relative to that of carbon and other elements, this
signature is similar to that observed in many of the so-called carbon-enhanced
metal-poor (CEMP) stars. We therefore suggest that some fraction of the
observed CEMP stars may, in fact, be accretion-polluted Pop III stars.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in MNRA
The Early Growth of the First Black Holes
With detections of quasars powered by increasingly massive black holes (BHs)
at increasingly early times in cosmic history over the past decade, there has
been correspondingly rapid progress made on the theory of early BH formation
and growth. Here we review the emerging picture of how the first massive BHs
formed from the primordial gas and then grew to supermassive scales. We discuss
the initial conditions for the formation of the progenitors of these seed BHs,
the factors dictating the initial masses with which they form, and their
initial stages of growth via accretion, which may occur at super-Eddington
rates. Finally, we briefly discuss how these results connect to large-scale
simulations of the growth of supermassive BHs over the course of the first
billion years following the Big Bang.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, invited review accepted for publication in PAS
Suppression of accretion onto low-mass Population III stars
Motivated by recent theoretical work suggesting that a substantial fraction
of Population (Pop) III stars may have had masses low enough for them to
survive to the present day, we consider the role that the accretion of
metal-enriched gas may have had in altering their surface composition, thereby
disguising them as Pop II stars. We demonstrate that if weak, Solar-like winds
are launched from low-mass Pop III stars formed in the progenitors of the dark
matter halo of the Galaxy, then such stars are likely to avoid significant
enrichment via accretion of material from the interstellar medium. We find that
at early times accretion is easily prevented if the stars are ejected from the
central regions of the haloes in which they form, either by dynamical
interactions with more massive Pop III stars, or by violent relaxation during
halo mergers. While accretion may still take place during passage through
sufficiently dense molecular clouds at later times, we find that the
probability of such a passage is generally low (< 0.1), assuming that stars
have velocities of order the maximum circular velocity of their host haloes and
accounting for the orbital decay of merging haloes. In turn, due to the higher
gas density required for accretion onto stars with higher velocities, we find
an even lower probability of accretion (~ 0.01) for the subset of Pop III stars
formed at z > 10, which are more quickly incorporated into massive haloes than
stars formed at lower redshift. While there is no a priori reason to assume
that low-mass Pop III stars do not have Solar-like winds, without them surface
enrichment via accretion is likely to be inevitable. We briefly discuss the
implications that our results hold for stellar archaeology.Comment: 9 pages; 2 figures; MNRAS accepte
The cooling of shock-compressed primordial gas
We find that at redshifts z > 10, HD line cooling allows strongly-shocked
primordial gas to cool to the temperature of the cosmic microwave background
(CMB). This temperature is the minimum value attainable via radiative cooling.
Provided that the abundance of HD, normalized to the total number density,
exceeds a critical level of ~ 10^{-8}, the CMB temperature floor is reached in
a time which is short compared to the Hubble time. We estimate the
characteristic masses of stars formed out of shocked primordial gas in the wake
of the first supernovae, and resulting from the mergers of dark matter haloes
during hierarchical structure formation to be ~ 10 M_{solar}. In addition, we
show that cooling by HD enables the primordial gas in relic H II regions to
cool to temperatures considerably lower than those reached via H_2 cooling
alone. We confirm that HD cooling is unimportant in cases where the primordial
gas does not go through an ionized phase, as in the formation process of the
very first stars in z ~ 20 minihaloes of mass ~ 10^{6} M_{solar}.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS with minor
revisions, new table adde
Large-scale variations of the dust optical properties in the Galaxy
We present an analysis of the dust optical properties at large scale, for the
whole galactic anticenter hemisphere. We used the 2MASS Extended Source Catalog
to obtain the total reddening on each galaxy line of sight and we compared this
value to the IRAS 100 microns surface brightness converted to extinction by
Schlegel et al (1998). We performed a careful examination and correction of the
possible systematic effects resulting from foreground star contamination,
redshift contribution and galaxy selection bias. We also evaluated the
contribution of dust temperature variations and interstellar clumpiness to our
method. The correlation of the near-infrared extinction to the far-infrared
optical depth shows a discrepancy for visual extinction greater than 1 mag with
a ratio A_V(FIR) / A_V(gal) = 1.31 +- 0.06. We attribute this result to the
presence of fluffy/composite grains characterized by an enhanced far--infrared
emissivity. Our analysis, applied to half of the sky, provides new insights on
the dust grains nature suggesting fluffy grains are found not only in some very
specific regions but in all directions for which the visual extinction reaches
about 1 mag.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Uncovering The Chemical Signature Of The First Stars In The Universe
The chemical abundance patterns observed in metal-poor Galactic halo stars contain the signature of the first supernovae, and thus allow us to probe the first stars that formed in the universe. We construct a theoretical model for the early chemical enrichment history of the Milky Way, aiming in particular at the contribution from pair-instability supernovae (PISNe). These are a natural consequence of current theoretical models for primordial star formation at the highest masses. However, no metal-poor star displaying the distinct PISN signature has yet been observed. We here argue that this apparent absence of any PISN signature is due to an observational selection effect. Whereas most surveys traditionally focus on the most metal-poor stars, we predict that early PISN enrichment tends to "overshoot,'' reaching enrichment levels of [Ca/H] similar or equal to -2.5 that would be missed by current searches. We utilize existing observational data to place constraints on the primordial initial mass function (IMF). The number fraction of PISNe in the primordial stellar population is estimated to be 90%) contribution from PISNe is merely similar to 10(-4) to 5 x 10(-4). The corresponding fraction of stars formed from gas exclusively enriched by PISNe is a factor of similar to 4 smaller. With the advent of next-generation telescopes and new, deeper surveys, we should be able to test these predictions.NSF AST 07-08795Astronom
Properties of Gamma-Ray Burst Progenitor Stars
We determine some basic properties of stars that produce spectacular
gamma-ray bursts at the end of their life. We assume that accretion of the
outer portion of the stellar core by a central black hole fuels the prompt
emission, and that fall-back and accretion of the stellar envelope later
produces the plateau in the X-ray light curve seen in some bursts. Using X-ray
data for three bursts we estimate the radius of the stellar core to be ~ 1-3 x
10^10 cm, and that of the stellar envelope to be ~ 1-2 x 10^11 cm. The density
profile in the envelope is fairly shallow, with \rho ~ r^-2. The rotation
speeds of the core and envelope are ~ 0.05 and ~ 0.2 of the local Keplerian
speed, respectively.Comment: Science in pres
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