The characteristic mass of stars at early times may have been higher than
today owing to the cosmic microwave background (CMB). This study proposes that
(1) the testable predictions of this "CMB-IMF" hypothesis are an increase in
the fraction of carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars with declining
metallicity and an increase from younger to older populations at a single
metallicity (e.g. disk to halo), and (2) these signatures are already seen in
recent samples of CEMP stars and can be better tested with anticipated data.
The expected spatial variation may explain discrepancies of CEMP frequency
among published surveys. The ubiquity and time dependence of the CMB will
substantially alter the reconstruction of star formation histories in the Local
Group and early Universe.Comment: 7 pages emulateapj format, three figures, accepted for ApJ Letter