1,664 research outputs found
Population III Star Formation During and After the Reionization Epoch
Population III star formation during the dark ages shifted from minihalos
(~10^6 Msun) cooled via molecular hydrogen to more massive halos (~10^8 Msun)
cooled via Ly-alpha as Lyman-Werner backgrounds progressively quenched
molecular hydrogen cooling. Eventually, both modes of primordial star formation
were suppressed by the chemical enrichment of the IGM. We present a
comprehensive model for following the modes of Population III star formation
that is based on a combination of analytical calculations and cosmological
simulations. We characterize the properties of the transition from metal-free
star formation to the first Population II clusters for an average region of the
Universe and for the progenitors of the Milky Way. Finally, we highlight the
possibility of observing the explosion of Population III stars within Ly-alpha
cooled halos at redshift z~6 in future deep all sky surveys such as LSST.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; Proceedings of 'The First Stars and Galaxies:
Challenges for the Next Decade", Austin, TX, March 8-11, 201
The Brightest of Reionizing Galaxies (BoRG) survey
Until now, investigating the early stages of galaxy formation has been
primarily the realm of theoretical modeling and computer simulations, which
require many physical ingredients and are challenging to test observationally.
However, the latest Hubble Space Telescope observations in the near infrared
are shedding new light on the properties of galaxies within the first billion
years after the Big Bang, including our recent discovery of the most distant
proto-cluster of galaxies at redshift z~8. Here, I compare predictions from
models of primordial and metal-enriched star formation during the dark ages
with the latest Hubble observations of galaxies during the epoch of
reionization. I focus in particular on the luminosity function and on galaxy
clustering as measured from our Hubble Space Telescope Brightest of Reionizing
Galaxies (BoRG) survey. BoRG has the largest area coverage to find luminous and
rare z~8 sources that are among the first galaxies to have formed in the
Universe.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in proceedings of First Stars IV
meeting (Kyoto, Japan; 2012
Gamma-Ray-Burst Host Galaxy Surveys at Redshift z>4: Probes of Star Formation Rate and Cosmic Reionization
Measuring the star formation rate (SFR) at high redshift is crucial for
understanding cosmic reionization and galaxy formation. Two common
complementary approaches are Lyman-Break-Galaxy (LBG) surveys for large samples
and Gamma-Ray-Burst (GRB) observations for sensitivity to SFR in small
galaxies. The z>4 GRB-inferred SFR is higher than the LBG rate, but this
difference is difficult to understand, as both methods rely on several modeling
assumptions. Using a physically motivated galaxy luminosity function model,
with star formation in dark-matter halos with virial temperature Tvir>2e4 K
(M_DM>2e8 M_sun), we show that GRB and LBG-derived SFRs are consistent if GRBs
extend to faint galaxies (M_AB<-11). To test star formation below the detection
limit L_lim~0.05L^*_{z=3} of LBG surveys, we propose to measure the fraction
f_det(L>L_lim,z) of GRB hosts with L>L_lim. This fraction quantifies the
missing star formation fraction in LBG surveys, constraining the
mass-suppression scale for galaxy formation, with weak dependence on modeling
assumptions. Because f_det(L>L_lim,z) corresponds to the ratio of star
formation rates derived from LBG and GRB surveys, if these estimators are
unbiased, measuring f_det(L>L_lim,z) also constrains the redshift evolution of
the GRB production rate per unit mass of star formation. Our analysis predicts
significant success for GRB host detections at z~5 with f_det(L>L_lim,z)~0.4,
but rarer detections at z>6. By analyzing the upper limits on host-galaxy
luminosities of six z>5 GRBs from literature data, we infer that galaxies with
M_AB>-15 were present at z>5 at 95% confidence, demonstrating the key role
played by very faint galaxies during reionization.Comment: Minor revision: ApJL accepted [7 pages, 4 figures
The very first Pop III stars and their relation to bright z~6 quasars
We discuss the link between dark matter halos hosting the first PopIII stars
formed at redshift z > 40 and the rare, massive, halos that are generally
considered to host bright z~6 quasars. We show that within the typical volume
occupied by one bright high-z QSO the remnants of the first several thousands
PopIII stars formed do not end up in the most massive halos at z~6, but rather
live in a large variety of environments. The black hole seeds planted by these
very first PopIII stars can easily grow to M > 10^{9.5} Msun by z=6 assuming
Eddington accretion with radiative efficiency epsilon~0.1. Therefore quenching
of the accretion is crucial to avoid an overabundance of supermassive black
holes. We implement a simple feedback model for the growth of the seeds planted
by PopIII stars and obtain a z~6 BH mass function consistent with the observed
QSO luminosity function.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in the proceedings of "First Stars III", AIP
Conference Series, T. Abel, A. Heger and B. O'Shea ed
Dynamical models and numerical simulations of incomplete violent relaxation
N-body simulations of collisionless collapse have offered important clues to
the construction of realistic stellar dynamical models of elliptical galaxies.
Such simulations confirm and quantify the qualitative expectation that rapid
collapse of a self-gravitating collisionless system, initially cool and
significantly far from equilibrium, leads to incomplete relaxation. In this
paper we revisit the problem, by comparing the detailed properties of a family
of distribution functions derived from statistical mechanics arguments to those
of the products of collisionless collapse found in N-body simulations.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the 39th
Rencontres de Moriond, "Exploring the Universe," La Thuile, Italy, March 28 -
April 4, 200
Dynamical properties of a family of collisionless models of elliptical galaxies
N-body simulations of collisionless collapse have offered important clues to
the construction of realistic stellar dynamical models of elliptical galaxies.
Such simulations confirm and quantify the qualitative expectation that rapid
collapse of a self-gravitating collisionless system, initially cool and
significantly far from equilibrium, leads to incomplete relaxation, that is to
a quasi-equilibrium configuration characterized by isotropic, quasi-Maxwellian
distribution of stellar orbits in the inner regions and by radially biased
anisotropic pressure in the outer parts. In earlier studies, as illustrated in
a number of papers several years ago (see Bertin et al. 1993 and references
therein), the attention was largely focused on the successful comparison
between the models (constructed under the qualitative clues offered by the
N-body simulations mentioned above) and the observations. In this paper we
revisit the problem of incomplete violent relaxation, by making a direct
comparison between the detailed properties of a family of distribution
functions and those of the products of collisionless collapse found in N-body
simulations.Comment: to appear in "Plasmas in the Laboratory and in the Universe: new
insights and new challenges", G. Bertin, D. Farina, R. Pozzoli eds., AIP
Conference Proceedings, Vol. XXX, pp. YY
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