501 research outputs found
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
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
Towards the First Galaxies
The formation of the first galaxies at redshifts z~10-15 signaled the
transition from the simple initial state of the universe to one of ever
increasing complexity. We here review recent progress in understanding their
assembly process with numerical simulations, starting with cosmological initial
conditions and modelling the detailed physics of star formation. In particular,
we study the role of HD cooling in ionized primordial gas, the impact of UV
radiation produced by the first stars, and the propagation of the supernova
blast waves triggered at the end of their brief lives. We conclude by
discussing promising observational diagnostics that will allow us to probe the
properties of the first galaxies, such as their contribution to reionization
and the chemical abundance pattern observed in extremely low-metallicity stars.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures, appeared in "First Stars III", eds. B. O'Shea,
A. Heger and T. Abel, a high resolution version (highly recommended) can be
found at http://www.ita.uni-heidelberg.de/~tgreif/files/gjb07.pd
Recommended from our members
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 200M(circle dot) pair-instability supernova in the high-redshift universe. We find that the SN remnant propagates for a Hubble time at z similar or equal to 20 to a final mass-weighted mean shock radius of 2.5 kpc (proper), roughly half the size of the H II region, and in this process sweeps up a total gas mass of 2: 5; 10(5) M-circle dot. 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 greater than or similar to 10(8) M-circle dot must be assembled to recollect all components of the swept-up gas.Astronom
Low-Mass Relics of Early Star Formation
The earliest stars to form in the Universe were the first sources of light,
heat and metals after the Big Bang. The products of their evolution will have
had a profound impact on subsequent generations of stars. Recent studies of
primordial star formation have shown that, in the absence of metals (elements
heavier than helium), the formation of stars with masses 100 times that of the
Sun would have been strongly favoured, and that low-mass stars could not have
formed before a minimum level of metal enrichment had been reached. The value
of this minimum level is very uncertain, but is likely to be between 10^{-6}
and 10^{-4} that of the Sun. Here we show that the recent discovery of the most
iron-poor star known indicates the presence of dust in extremely
low-metallicity gas, and that this dust is crucial for the formation of
lower-mass second-generation stars that could survive until today. The dust
provides a pathway for cooling the gas that leads to fragmentation of the
precursor molecular cloud into smaller clumps, which become the lower-mass
stars.Comment: Offprint of Nature 422 (2003), 869-871 (issue 24 April 2003
The minimum stellar metallicity observable in the Galaxy
The first stars fundamentally transformed the early Universe through their
production of energetic radiation and the first heavy chemical elements. The
impact on cosmic evolution sensitively depends on their initial mass function
(IMF), which can be empirically constrained through detailed studies of
ancient, metal-poor halo stars in our Galaxy. We compare the lowest magnesium
and iron abundances measured in Galactic halo stars with theoretical
predictions for the minimum stellar enrichment provided by Population III stars
under the assumption of a top-heavy IMF. To demonstrate that abundances
measured in metal-poor stars reflect the chemical conditions at their
formation, and that they can thus be used to derive constraints on the
primordial IMF, we carry out a detailed kinematic analysis of a large sample of
metal-poor stars drawn from the SDSS survey. We assess whether interstellar
accretion has altered their surface abundances. We find that accretion is
generally negligible, even at the extremely low levels where the primordial IMF
can be tested. We conclude that the majority of the first stars were very
massive, but had likely masses below ~140 M.Comment: 5 pages, accepted for publication in MNRA
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