614 research outputs found
Do the environmental conditions affect the dust-induced fragmentation in low-metallicity clouds ?: Effect of pre-ionization and far-ultraviolet/cosmic-ray fields
We study effects of the fully ionized initial state, or pre-ionization, on
the subsequent thermal evolution of low-metallicity clouds under various
intensities of the external far-ultraviolet(FUV) and cosmic-ray(CR) fields. The
pre-ionization significantly affects the thermal and dynamical evolution of
metal-free clouds without FUV/CRs by way of efficient HD formation. On the
other hand, the pre-ionization effect on the thermal evolution is limited in
very low-density regime for more metal-enriched clouds ([Z/H] >~ -4) or those
under modest FUV (>10^{-3}) or CR field (>0.1 of the present-day Galactic disk
levels). In any case, for >10^8 cm^{-3}, neither the initial ionization state
nor the irradiating FUV strength affect the thermal evolution. The dust cooling
is an important mechanism for making sub-solar mass fragments in
low-metallicity gas. Since this fragmentation occurs at the temperature minimum
by the dust cooling at >10^{10} cm^{-3}, this process is not vulnerable either
to initial ionization state or external radiation.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, PASJ accepte
Observational Characteristics of the First Protostellar Cores
First protostellar cores are young stellar objects in the earliest
evolutionary stage. They are hydrostatic objects formed soon after the central
portions of star-forming cores become optically thick to dust emission. We
consider their characteristics in the emitted radiation, and discuss their
evolution with increasing mass of the cores. Particular attention is paid to
detailed radiative and chemical processes in the postshock relaxation layer
located at the surface of the core, where the majority of radiation is emitted.
Most of the radiation is originally emitted in the dust continuum in
mid-infrared wavelength (~10-30 micron), which reprocessed to far-infrared with
~100-200 micron. Although some fraction (~0.1) of the radiation energy is
emitted in the H2O lines at the accretion shock, most is absorbed and reemitted
in the dust continuum in the envelope. The H2O lines account for at most ~1/100
of the observed luminosity. If a cavity is present in the envelope due to
outflow or rotation, the dust and H2O line emission in the mid-infrared
wavelength from the shock can be observed directly, or as a reflection nebula.
Among forthcoming observational facillities, SPICA is the most suitable for
detecting either direct or processed radiation from first-core objects.Comment: To appear in PASJ vol.5
The effect of dust cooling on low-metallicity star-forming clouds
The theory for the formation of the first population of stars (Pop III)
predicts a IMF composed predominantly of high-mass stars, in contrast to the
present-day IMF, which tends to yield stars with masses less than 1 M_Solar.
The leading theory for the transition in the characteristic stellar mass
predicts that the cause is the extra cooling provided by increasing metallicity
and in particular the cooling provided at high densities by dust. The aim of
this work is to test whether dust cooling can lead to fragmentation and be
responsible for this transition. To investigate this, we make use of
high-resolution hydrodynamic simulations. We follow the thermodynamic evolution
of the gas by solving the full thermal energy equation, and also track the
evolution of the dust temperature and the chemical evolution of the gas. We
model clouds with different metallicities, and determine the properties of the
cloud at the point at which it undergoes gravitational fragmentation. We follow
the further collapse to scales of an AU when we replace very dense,
gravitationally bound, and collapsing regions by a simple and nongaseous
object, a sink particle. Our results suggest that for metallicities as small as
10^{-5}Z_Solar, dust cooling produces low-mass fragments and hence can
potentially enable the formation of low mass stars. We conclude that dust
cooling affects the fragmentation of low-metallicity gas clouds and plays an
important role in shaping the stellar IMF even at these very low metallicities.
We find that the characteristic fragment mass increases with decreasing
metallicity, but find no evidence for a sudden transition in the behaviour of
the IMF within the range of metallicites examined in our present study.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Black hole formation in primordial galaxies: chemical and radiative conditions
In massive primordial galaxies, the gas may directly collapse and form a
single central massive object if cooling is suppressed. Line cooling by
molecular hydrogen can be suppressed in the presence of a strong
soft-ultraviolet radiation field, but the role played by other cooling
mechanisms is less clear. In optically thin gas, Lyman-Alpha cooling can be
very effective, maintaining the gas temperature below 10^4 K over many orders
of magnitude in density. However, the large neutral hydrogen column densities
present in primordial galaxies render them highly optically thick to
Lyman-Alpha photons. In this letter, we examine in detail the effects of the
trapping of these Lyman-Alpha photons on the thermal and chemical evolution of
the gas. We show that despite the high optical depth in the Lyman series lines,
cooling is not strongly suppressed, and proceeds via other atomic hydrogen
transitions, in particular the 2s-1s and the 3-2 transitions. At densities
larger than 10^9 cm^{-3}, collisional dissociation of molecular hydrogen
becomes the dominant cooling process and decreases the gas temperature to about
5000 K. The gas temperature evolves with density as , with . The
evolution is thus very close to isothermal, and so fragmentation is possible,
but unlikely to occur during the initial collapse. However, after the formation
of a massive central object, we expect that later-infalling, higher angular
momentum material will form an accretion disk that may be unstable to
fragmentation, which may give rise to star formation with a top-heavy IMF.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted at ApJ
Low-mass star formation triggered by early supernova explosions
We study the formation of low-mass and extremely metal-poor stars in the
early universe. Our study is motivated by the recent discovery of a low-mass (M
< 0.8 Msun) and extremely metal-poor (Z <= 4.5 x 10^{-5} Zsun) star in the
Galactic halo by Caffau et al. We propose a model that early supernova (SN)
explosions trigger the formation of low-mass stars via shell fragmentation. We
first perform one-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations of the evolution of an
early SN remnant. We show that the shocked shell undergoes efficient radiative
cooling and then becomes gravitationally unstable to fragment and collapse in
about ten million years. We then follow the thermal evolution of the collapsing
fragments using a one-zone code. Our one-zone calculation treats chemistry and
radiative cooling self-consistently in low-metallicity gas. The collapsing gas
cloud evolves roughly isothermally, until it cools rapidly by dust continuum
emission at the density 10^{13}-10^{14} /cc. The cloud core then becomes
thermally and gravitationally unstable and fragments. We argue that early SNe
can trigger the formation of low-mass stars in the extremely metal-poor
environment as Caffau et al. discovered recently.Comment: [v1] Submitted to ApJ Letters, 11 pages, 3 figures: [v2] matches
version published in ApJ (main journal), 8 pages, 6 figures. Parameter
regions we investigate (initial ambient gas density surrounding the
progenitor star) are widene
Low-Metallicity Star Formation : Prestellar Collapse and Protostellar Accretion in the Spherical Symmetry
The collapse of dense cores with different metallicities is studied by
hydrodynamical calculations coupled with detailed chemical and radiative
processes. For this purpose, we construct a simple chemical network with
non-equilibrium reactions among 15 chemical species, which reproduces the
abundance of important molecular coolants by more detailed network very well.
The evolution is followed until the formation of a hydrostatic protostar at the
center. In a lower-metallicity gas cloud, the temperature during the collapse
remains high owing to less efficient cooling. Using the temperature evolution
at the center as a function the density, we discuss the possibility of
fragmentation during the dust-cooling phase. The critical metallicity for the
fragmentation is 10^{-5}Z_sun assuming moderate elongation of the cloud cores
at the onset of this phase. From the density and velocity distributions at the
time of protostar formation, we evaluate the mass accretion rate in the
subsequent accretion phase. Using these accretion rates, we also calculate the
evolution of the protostars under the assumption of stationary accretion flow.
Finally, we discuss possible suppression of fragmentation by heating of the
ambient gas by protostellar radiation, which is considered important in the
contemporary star formation. We argue that it is negligible for <10^{-2}Zsun.Comment: ApJ in pres
Rapidly Accreting Supergiant Protostars: Embryos of Supermassive Black Holes?
Direct collapse of supermassive stars (SMSs) is a possible pathway for
generating supermassive black holes in the early universe. It is expected that
an SMS could form via very rapid mass accretion with Mdot ~ 0.1 - 1 Msun/yr
during the gravitational collapse of an atomic-cooling primordial gas cloud. In
this paper we study how stars would evolve under such extreme rapid mass
accretion, focusing on the early evolution until the stellar mass reaches 1000
Msun. To this end we numerically calculate the detailed interior structure of
accreting stars with primordial element abundances. Our results show that for
accretion rates higher than 0.01 Msun/yr, stellar evolution is qualitatively
different from that expected at lower rates. While accreting at these high
rates the star always has a radius exceeding 100 Rsun, which increases
monotonically with the stellar mass. The mass-radius relation for stellar
masses exceeding ~ 100 Msun follows the same track with R_* \propto M_*^0.5 in
all cases with accretion rates > 0.01 Msun/yr; at a stellar mass of 1000 Msun
the radius is about 7000 Rsun (~= 30 AU). With higher accretion rates the onset
of hydrogen burning is shifted towards higher stellar masses. In particular,
for accretion rates exceeding Mdot > 0.1 Msun/yr, there is no significant
hydrogen burning even after 1000 Msun have accreted onto the protostar. Such
"supergiant" protostars have effective temperatures as low as Teff ~= 5000 K
throughout their evolution and because they hardly emit ionizing photons, they
do not create an HII region or significantly heat their immediate surroundings.
Thus, radiative feedback is unable to hinder the growth of rapidly accreting
stars to masses in excess of 1000 Msun, as long as material is accreted at
rates Mdot > 0.01 Msun/yr.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
Condition for low-mass star formation in shock-compressed metal-poor clouds
Shocks may have been prevalent in the early Universe, associated with
virialization and supernova explosions, etc. Here, we study thermal evolution
and fragmentation of shock-compressed clouds, by using a one-zone model with
detailed thermal and chemical processes. We explore a large range of initial
density (1-1e5 /cm^3), metallicity (0-1e-2 Z_sun), UV strength (0-500 times
Galactic value), and cosmic microwave background temperature (10 and 30 K).
Shock-compressed clouds contract isobarically via atomic and molecular line
cooling, until self-gravitating clumps are formed by fragmentation. If the
metals are only in the gas-phase, the clump mass is higher than ~ 3 M_sun in
any conditions we studied. Although in some cases with a metallicity higher
than ~ 1e-3 Z_sun, re-fragmentation of a clump is caused by metal-line cooling,
this fragment mass is higher than ~ 30 M_sun. On the other hand, if about half
the mass of metals is condensed in dust grains, as in the Galactic interstellar
medium, dust cooling triggers re-fragmentation of a clump into sub-solar mass
pieces, for metallicities higher than ~ 1e-5 Z_sun. Therefore, the presence of
dust is essential in low-mass (< M_sun) star formation from a shock-compressed
cloud.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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