Star Formation at Very Low Metallicity. V. The Greater Importance of Initial Conditions Compared to Metallicity Thresholds
A.-K. Jappsen (1), M.-M. Mac Low (2), S. C. O. Glover (3), R. S., Klessen (3), S. Kitsionas (4) ((1) School of Physics, Astronomy,, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK, (2) American Museum of Natural History, New, York, NY, USA, (3) Institut fuer Theoretische Astrophysik

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to show that initial conditions of protogalaxies, rather than metallicity thresholds, primarily determine star formation processes and fragmentation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that initial conditions have a greater impact on star formation and fragmentation than previously thought metallicity thresholds.
Findings
No fragmentation observed up to high densities at various metallicities.
Rotation leads to stable gas disks over long timescales.
Fragmentation depends more on initial conditions than on metallicity.
Abstract
The formation of the first stars out of metal-free gas appears to result in stars at least an order of magnitude more massive than in the present-day case. We here consider what controls the transition from a primordial to a modern initial mass function. It has been proposed that this occurs when effective metal line cooling occurs at a metallicity threshold of Z/Z_sun > 10^{-3.5}. We study the influence of low levels of metal enrichment on the cooling and collapse of initially ionized gas in small protogalactic halos using three-dimensional, smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations with particle splitting. Our initial conditions represent protogalaxies forming within a previously ionized H ii region that has not yet had time to cool and recombine. These differ considerably from those used in simulations predicting a metallicity threshold, where the gas was initially cold and only…
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