The First Stellar Cluster
Paul C. Clark, Simon C. O. Glover, Ralf S. Klessen

TL;DR
Numerical simulations reveal that low-metallicity gas in the early universe can fragment to form dense stellar clusters, with the first such cluster having a mass function peaking below one solar mass, similar to present-day stars.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that primordial and very low-metallicity gas can fragment into dense stellar clusters, providing insights into the formation of the first stars and their mass distribution.
Findings
Primordial gas can fragment into dense clusters at high densities.
The first stellar cluster has a mass function peaking below 1 Msun.
Low-metallicity gas favors formation of massive stars over low-mass stars.
Abstract
We report results from numerical simulations of star formation in the early universe that focus on gas at very high densities and very low metallicities. We argue that the gas in the central regions of protogalactic halos will fragment as long as it carries sufficient angular momentum. Rotation leads to the build-up of massive disk-like structures which fragment to form protostars. At metallicities Z ~ 10^-5 Zsun, dust cooling becomes effective and leads to a sudden drop of temperature at densities above n = 10^12 cm^-3. This induces vigorous fragmentation, leading to a very densely-packed cluster of low-mass stars. This is the first stellar cluster. The mass function of stars peaks below 1 Msun, similar to what is found in the solar neighborhood, and comparable to the masses of the very-low metallicity subgiant stars recently discovered in the halo of our Milky Way. We find that even…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
