4.7 Article

The role of the H2 adiabatic index in the formation of the first stars

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 490, Issue 1, Pages 513-526

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stz2618

Keywords

hydrodynamics; turbulence; stars: formation; stars: Population III; early Universe; primordial nucleosynthesis

Funding

  1. Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship
  2. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DP190101258, DP170100603, FT180100375, FT180100495]
  3. Australia-Germany Joint Research Cooperation Scheme (UA-DAAD)
  4. DOE
  5. Australian National Computational Infrastructure (NCI) [ek9, jh2]

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The adiabatic index of H-2 (gamma(H2)) is non-constant at temperatures between 100 and 10(4) K due to the large energy spacing between its rotational and vibrational modes. For the formation of the first stars at redshifts 20 and above, this variation can be significant because primordial molecular clouds are in this temperature range due to the absence of efficient cooling by dust and metals. We study the possible importance of variations in gamma(H2) for the primordial initialmass function by carrying out 80 3D gravitohydrodynamic simulations of collapsing clouds with different random turbulent velocity fields, half using fixed gamma(H2) = 7/5 in the limit of classical diatomic gas (used in earlier works) and half using an accurate quantum mechanical treatment of gamma(H2). We use the adaptive mesh refinement code FLASH with the primordial chemistry network from KROME for this study. The simulation suite produces almost 400 stars, with masses from 0.02 to 50 M-circle dot (mean mass similar to 10.5M(circle dot) and mean multiplicity fraction similar to 0.4). While the results of individual simulations do differ when we change our treatment of gamma(H2), we find no statistically significant differences in the overall mass or multiplicity distributions of the stars formed in the two sets of runs. We conclude that, at least prior to the onset of radiation feedback, approximating H-2 as a classical diatomic gas with gamma(H2) = 7/5 does not induce significant errors in simulations of the fragmentation of primordial gas. None the less, we recommend using the accurate formulation of the H-2 adiabatic index in primordial star formation studies since it is not computationally more expensive and provides a better treatment of the thermodynamics.

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