Simulations on a Moving Mesh: The Clustered Formation of Population III Protostars
Thomas Greif, Volker Springel, Simon White, Simon Glover, Paul Clark,, Rowan Smith, Ralf Klessen, Volker Bromm

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations to demonstrate that Population III stars form in clusters through disk fragmentation, challenging the traditional view of isolated, massive first stars.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed simulation evidence that Population III stars form in clusters via disk fragmentation, highlighting environmental influences on star formation.
Findings
Population III stars form in clusters rather than isolation.
Protostellar mass range from 0.1 to 10 solar masses.
Fragmentation occurs repeatedly during accretion phases.
Abstract
The cosmic dark ages ended a few hundred million years after the Big Bang, when the first stars began to fill the universe with new light. It has generally been argued that these stars formed in isolation and were extremely massive - perhaps 100 times as massive as the Sun. In a recent study, Clark and collaborators showed that this picture requires revision. They demonstrated that the accretion disks that build up around Population III stars are strongly susceptible to fragmentation and that the first stars should therefore form in clusters rather than in isolation. We here use a series of high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations performed with the moving mesh code AREPO to follow up on this proposal and to study the influence of environmental parameters on the level of fragmentation. We model the collapse of five independent minihalos from cosmological initial conditions, through…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
