Uncovering the Chemical Signature of the First Stars in the Universe
Torgny Karlsson, Jarrett L. Johnson, Volker Bromm

TL;DR
This paper models early chemical enrichment in the Milky Way, focusing on the elusive signatures of pair-instability supernovae, and predicts observational biases and the rarity of PISN-dominated stars.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical model for PISN contribution to early galactic chemical enrichment and explains why PISN signatures are rarely observed in metal-poor stars.
Findings
PISNe constitute less than 7% of primordial supernovae.
Most PISN-enriched stars are missed due to high enrichment levels.
Predicted extremely low fraction (~0.0001) of stars dominated by PISNe.
Abstract
The chemical abundance patterns observed in metal-poor Galactic halo stars contain the signature of the first supernovae, and thus allows us to probe the first stars that formed in the universe. We construct a theoretical model for the early chemical enrichment history of the Milky Way, aiming in particular at the contribution from pair-instability supernovae (PISNe). These are a natural consequence of current theoretical models for primordial star formation at the highest masses. However, no metal-poor star displaying the distinct PISN signature has yet been observed. We here argue that this apparent absence of any PISN signature is due to an observational selection effect. Whereas most surveys traditionally focus on the most metal-poor stars, we predict that early PISN enrichment tends to `overshoot', reaching enrichment levels of [Ca/H] ~= -2.5 that would be missed by current…
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