Population III star formation in a lambda-CDM Universe. 1. The effect of formation redshift and environment on protostellar accretion rate
Jul, 200659 pages
Published in:
- Astrophys.J. 654 (2006) 66-92
e-Print:
- astro-ph/0607013 [astro-ph]
DOI:
Report number:
- LA-UR-06-3758
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Abstract: (arXiv)
(abridged) We perform 12 extremely high resolution adaptive mesh refinement cosmological hydrodynamic simulations of Population III star formation in a Lambda CDM universe, varying the box size and large-scale structure, to understand systematic effects in the formation of primordial protostellar cores. We find results that are qualitatively similar to those observed previously. We observe that the threshold halo mass for formation of a Population III protostar does not evolve significantly with time in the redshift range studied (33 > z > 19) but exhibits substantial scatter due to different halo assembly histories: Halos which assembled more slowly develop cooling cores at lower mass than those that assemble more rapidly, in agreement with Yoshida et al. (2003). We do, however, observe significant evolution in the accretion rates of Population III protostars with redshift, with objects that form later having higher maximum accretion rates, with a variation of two orders of magnitude (10^-4 - 10^-2 Msolar/year). This can be explained by considering the evolving virial properties of the halos with redshift and the physics of molecular hydrogen formation at low densities. Our result implies that the mass distribution of Population III stars inferred from their accretion rates may be broader than previously thought, and may evolve with redshift. Finally, we observe that our collapsing protostellar cloud cores do not fragment, consistent with previous results, which suggests that Population III stars which form in halos of mass 10^5 - 10^6 Msun always form in isolation.- cosmology: theory
- galaxies: high-redshift
- hydrodynamics
- stars: formation
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