First Stars. I. Evolution without mass loss
D. Bahena, J. Klapp

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution of the first, very massive, zero-metallicity stars without mass loss, revealing their structural properties, nuclear processes, and implications for early universe phenomena.
Contribution
It provides detailed stellar evolution models for primordial stars across a range of masses and metallicities, incorporating advanced nuclear and convection treatments.
Findings
Low metallicity stars are hotter, more compact, and luminous.
Primordial stars activate heavy element production earlier due to higher temperatures.
Stars evolve below the Eddington limit with short lifetimes.
Abstract
The first generation of stars was formed from primordial gas. Numerical simulations suggest that the first stars were predominantly very massive, with typical masses M > 100 Mo. These stars were responsible for the reionization of the universe, the initial enrichment of the intergalactic medium with heavy elements, and other cosmological consequences. In this work, we study the structure of Zero Age Main Sequence stars for a wide mass and metallicity range and the evolution of 100, 150, 200, 250 and 300 Mo galactic and pregalactic Pop III very massive stars without mass loss, with metallicity Z=10E-6 and 10E-9, respectively. Using a stellar evolution code, a system of 10 equations together with boundary conditions are solved simultaneously. For the change of chemical composition, which determines the evolution of a star, a diffusion treatment for convection and semiconvection is used. A…
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