Population III stars and the Long Gamma Ray Burst rate
M.A. Campisi, U. Maio, R. Salvaterra, B. Ciardi

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore the connection between Population III stars and long gamma-ray bursts, estimating their occurrence rates and properties at high redshift.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed estimate of the fraction of LGRBs originating from PopIII stars and analyzes their host galaxy properties using advanced simulations.
Findings
PopIII stars could account for up to 10-40% of high-redshift LGRBs.
The upper limit for PopIII-origin LGRBs is estimated at 0.6-2.2%.
PopIII GRB host galaxies are typically low-mass and have metallicities above the critical threshold.
Abstract
Because massive, low-metallicity population III (PopIII) stars may produce very powerful long gamma-ray bursts (LGRBs), high-redshift GRB observations could probe the properties of the first stars. We analyze the correlation between early PopIII stars and LGRBs by using cosmological N-body/hydrodynamical simulations, which include detailed chemical evolution, cooling, star formation, feedback effects and the transition between PopIII and more standard population I/II (PopII/I) stars. From the Swift observed rate of LGRBs, we estimate the fraction of black holes that will produce a GRB from PopII/I stars to be in the range 0.028<f_{GRB}<0.140, depending on the assumed upper metallicity of the progenitor. Assuming that as of today no GRB event has been associated to a PopIII star, we estimate the upper limit for the fraction of LGRBs produced by PopIII stars to be in the range…
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