Dark matter annihilation effects on the first stars
F. Iocco, A. Bressan, E. Ripamonti, R. Schneider, A. Ferrara, P., Marigo

TL;DR
This study investigates how WIMP dark matter influences the formation and evolution of the first stars, revealing that dark matter annihilation can temporarily halt collapse and extend stellar lifetimes, especially in lower-mass stars.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed stellar evolution models including dark matter annihilation effects on primordial, metal-free stars across a wide mass range.
Findings
Dark matter annihilation causes a transient 'dark' star phase lasting thousands of years.
Dark matter effects can halt the evolution of stars below 40 solar masses on the HR diagram.
Dark matter prolongs the lifetimes of massive stars by a factor of 2 to 5.
Abstract
We study the effects of WIMP dark matter (DM) on the collapse and evolution of the first stars in the Universe. Using a stellar evolution code, we follow the pre-Main Sequence (MS) phase of a grid of metal-free stars with masses in the range 5-600 solar mass forming in the centre of a 1e6 solar mass halo at redhisft z=20. DM particles of the parent halo are accreted in the proto-stellar interior by adiabatic contraction and scattering/capture processes, reaching central densities of order 1e12 GeV/cm3 at radii of the order of 10 AU. Energy release from annihilation reactions can effectively counteract the gravitational collapse, in agreement with results from other groups. We find this stalling phase (known as "dark" star) is transients and lasts from 2.1e3 yr (M=600 solar mass) to 1.8e4 yr (M=9 solar mass). Later in the evolution, DM scattering/capture rate becomes high enough that…
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