Towards A Universal Analytical Model of Population III Star Formation: A Bridge Between Cosmological Scales and Protostars
James Gurian, Boyuan Liu, Donghui Jeong, Takashi Hosokawa, Shingo Hirano + 2 more
TLDR
This analytical model bridges cosmological scales to protostellar disk fragmentation for Population III star formation, offering insights into early universe star formation.
Key contributions
- Constructs an analytical model connecting cosmological radiation to sub-AU protostellar disk fragmentation.
- Combines separate models for cosmic environment, host-halo, star-forming cloud, and protostellar disk scales.
- Shows Pop III star formation efficiency varies >2 orders of magnitude based on Lyman-Werner flux.
- Identifies sharp SFE transitions driven by H-D, H2, and atomic cooling mechanisms.
Why it matters
This model bridges a critical gap in understanding early universe star formation, covering scales inaccessible to single simulations. It provides an efficient and transparent tool to study the impact of cosmic radiation on the efficiency of the first stars.
Original Abstract
We construct an analytical model of Population III star formation that connects the cosmological radiation background to sub-AU protostellar disk fragmentation, a dynamic range inaccessible to any single simulation. Our approach is based on combining separate models of the disparate relevant scales: from the cosmological environment to the host-halo scale, from the halo scale to the scale of the star-forming cloud, and from the cloud scale to the fragmenting, accreting protostellar disk. Individually and collectively, the models agree well with the predictions of state of the art simulations, while remaining computationally inexpensive and physically transparent. As an example of the applicability of the model, we study the effects of varying the Lyman-Werner flux on the Pop. III star formation efficiency. We show that depending on the halo properties and the strength of the dissociating radiation field, the halo-scale Pop. III star formation efficiency varies by more than two orders of magnitude from $\varepsilon_{\rm SFE,H} \approx 10^{-3}$ to $\varepsilon_{\rm SFE, H} \approx 0.5$. The abrupt transitions between hydrogen-deuteride cooling (in low virial temperature mini-halos subjected to low radiation backgrounds), molecular hydrogen cooling (at intermediate temperatures and radiation intensities), and atomic cooling (in higher temperature halos exposed to strong radiation fields) produces sharp features in the halo-scale star formation efficiency as a function of the halo properties. Meanwhile, at the scale of individual star-forming clouds, the star formation efficiency is $\varepsilon_{\rm SFE,c} \gtrsim 0.2$. That is, pristine gas in a halo is converted into unstable clouds at a wide range of efficiencies, and these unstable clouds are efficiently converted into Pop. III stars.
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