4.7 Article

The transition from the first stars to the second stars in the early universe

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 661, Issue 1, Pages L5-L8

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/518692

Keywords

stars : formation

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We observe a sharp transition from a singular, high-mass mode of star formation to a low-mass-dominated mode, in numerical simulations, at a metallicity of 10(-3) Z.. We incorporate a new method for including the radiative cooling from metals into adaptive mesh refinement hydrodynamic simulations. Our results illustrate how metals, produced by the first stars, led to a transition from the high-mass star formation mode of Population III stars to the low-mass mode that dominates today. We ran hydrodynamic simulations with cosmological initial conditions in the standard Lambda CDM model, with metallicities, from zero to 10(-2) Z., beginning at redshift z = 99. The simulations were run until a dense core forms at the center of a 5 x 10(5) M. dark matter halo, at z similar to 1. Analysis of the central 1 M. core reveals that the two simulations with the lowest metallicities, Z = 0 and 10(-4) Z., contain one clump with 99% of the mass, while the two with metallicities and Z = 10(-3) and 10(-2) Z. each contain two clumps that share most of the mass. The Z = 10(-3) Z., simulation also produced two low-mass protostellar objects with masses between 10(-2) and 10(-1) M.. Gas with Z >= 10(-3) Z. is able to cool to the temperature of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), which sets a lower limit to the minimum fragmentation mass. This suggests that the second-generation stars produced a spectrum of lower mass stars but were still more massive, on average, than stars formed in the local universe.

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