Observing the First Stars and Black Holes
Zoltan Haiman (Columbia University)

TL;DR
This paper discusses how JWST will enable the detection and study of the first stars, black holes, and related phenomena at high redshifts, providing insights into early cosmic evolution and structure formation.
Contribution
It evaluates the potential of JWST to observe early universe objects, including star clusters, black holes, and supernovae, and explores their implications for understanding cosmic dawn.
Findings
JWST can detect low-mass black holes and star clusters up to redshift z=10.
Thousands of supernovae could be observed beyond redshift z=6 in dedicated surveys.
Observations will shed light on early star formation, feedback effects, and primordial power spectrum.
Abstract
The high sensitivity of JWST will open a new window on the end of the cosmological dark ages. Small stellar clusters, with a stellar mass of several 10^6 M_sun, and low-mass black holes (BHs), with a mass of several 10^5 M_sun should be directly detectable out to redshift z=10, and individual supernovae (SNe) and gamma ray burst (GRB) afterglows are bright enough to be visible beyond this redshift. Dense primordial gas, in the process of collapsing from large scales to form protogalaxies, may also be possible to image through diffuse recombination line emission, possibly even before stars or BHs are formed. In this article, I discuss the key physical processes that are expected to have determined the sizes of the first star-clusters and black holes, and the prospect of studying these objects by direct detections with JWST and with other instruments. The direct light emitted by the very…
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