The formation of the C-19 progenitor: a primordial cluster heated by gas expulsion
Zhen Wang, Long Wang, Zhen Yuan, Jiang Chang
TLDR
The primordial C-19 stream's high velocity dispersion is explained by severe gas expulsion during its formation, reconciling conflicting observations.
Key contributions
- Reconciles C-19's conflicting properties: small metallicity dispersion (cluster) and large velocity dispersion (dwarf).
- Demonstrates severe gas expulsion during birth explains C-19's large velocity dispersion and broad stream morphology.
- Suggests this gas expulsion scenario may be a typical formation path for extremely metal-poor star clusters.
Why it matters
This paper resolves a long-standing puzzle regarding the C-19 stream's unusual properties, offering an internal formation mechanism (gas expulsion) rather than external dark matter interactions. It provides crucial insights into the formation of primordial, extremely metal-poor star clusters in the early Universe.
Original Abstract
The extremely metal-poor nature of the C-19 stream indicates that its progenitor was a primordial stellar system born in the very early Universe. Current observations show that it has a small metallicity dispersion (0.18 at the 95% confidence level), which is the signature of a globular cluster origin, while at the same time displaying an unusually large velocity dispersion ($\sim10$ km/s) typical of dwarf galaxies. To reconcile this conflicting observational evidence, previous simulations have focused on potential interactions with dark matter subhalos, which can efficiently make a cluster stream dynamically hot. In this work, we explore internal dynamical processes in star cluster formation, focusing on initial conditions shaped by gas expulsion and a top-heavy initial mass function. We find that the large observed velocity dispersion and broad stream morphology can be reproduced by a cluster that underwent severe gas expulsion and expansion during its birth phase, which is potentially a typical formation scenario of extremely metal-poor star clusters. A top-heavy IMF and binaries can also increase the velocity dispersion. The formation of C-19 may involve a combination of these effects.
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