Population III star formation in a Lambda CDM universe, II: Effects of a photodissociating background
Brian W. O'Shea, Michael L. Norman

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore how ultraviolet backgrounds affect primordial star formation, revealing that Population III stars can form despite strong photodissociating radiation, with implications for early universe star formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Population III star formation persists even with high levels of Lyman-Werner radiation, challenging previous assumptions about suppression thresholds.
Findings
Population III stars form even at J$_{21} = 1$.
Higher LW backgrounds increase accretion rates.
Halo cores do not fragment below n ~ 10^{10} cm$^{-3}$.
Abstract
We examine aspects of primordial star formation in the presence of a molecular hydrogen-dissociating ultraviolet background. We compare a set of AMR hydrodynamic cosmological simulations using a single cosmological realization but with a range of ultraviolet background strengths in the Lyman-Werner band. This allows us to study the effects of Lyman-Werner radiation on suppressing H2 cooling at low densities as well as the high-density evolution of the collapsing core in a self-consistent cosmological framework. We find that the addition of a photodissociating background results in a delay of the collapse of high density gas at the center of the most massive halo in the simulation and, as a result, an increase in the virial mass of this halo at the onset of baryon collapse. We find that, contrary to previous results, Population III star formation is not suppressed for J,…
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