3–7 Dec 2018
Kavli IPMU
Asia/Tokyo timezone

The first matter cycle in the Universe: from Population III to extremely metal-poor stars

5 Dec 2018, 11:30
30m
Lecture Hall (Kavli IPMU)

Lecture Hall

Kavli IPMU

5-1-5 Kashiwanoha, Kashiwa-shi, Chiba 227-8583
EMP stars EMP Stars: Theory

Speaker

Gen Chiaki (Georgia Tech)

Description

We investigate the formation of extremely metal-poor (EMP) stars that are observed in the Galactic halo and neighboring ultra-faint dwarf galaxies. Their low metal abundances (${\rm [Fe/H]} < -3$) indicate that their parent clouds were enriched by a single or several supernovae (SNe) from the first (Pop III) stars. In this study, we perform numerical simulations of the formation sequence of a EMP star through the feedback effects from a Pop III star. We for the first time employ a metal/dust properties calculated consistently with the progenitor model. In a minihalo (MH) with mass $1.77\times 10^{6} \ {\rm M}_{\bigodot}$, a Pop III star with mass $13 \ {\rm M}_{\bigodot}$ forms at redshift $z=12.1$. After its SN explosion, the shocked gas falls back into the central MH internally enriching itself. The metallicity in the recollapsing region is $2.6\times 10^{-4} \ {\rm Z}_{\bigodot}$ (${\rm [Fe/H]} = -3.42$). The recollapsing cloud undergoes cooling by HD, CO, and OH molecules and heating along with H$_2$ formation. Eventually by grain growth and dust cooling, knotty filaments appear in the central 100 au region with the help of turbulence driven by the SN, leading to the formation of low-mass EMP stars surviving until the present day.

Affiliation

Konan University,
Georgia Institute of Technology

Talk/Poster Talk

Primary authors

Gen Chiaki (Georgia Tech) Dr John Wise (Georgia Institute of Technology)

Presentation materials