Ultra-faint dwarf galaxies as a test of early enrichment and metallicity-dependent star formation
Konstantinos Tassis, Nickolay Y. Gnedin, Andrey V. Kravtsov

TL;DR
This paper investigates how early star formation and metallicity influence dwarf galaxy evolution, proposing that early pre-enrichment by Population III stars explains the lack of predicted bi-modality in observed metallicity distributions.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking early pre-enrichment to the suppression of metallicity bi-modality in dwarf galaxies, supported by cosmological simulations.
Findings
Bi-modality predicted without pre-enrichment
Early Population III stars raise metallicity levels
Simulations show early pre-enrichment aligns with observations
Abstract
The tight relation of star formation with molecular gas indicated by observations and assumed in recent models implies that the efficiency with which galaxies convert their gas into stars depends on gas metallicity. This is because the abundance of molecular hydrogen is sensitive to the abundance of dust, which catalyzes the formation of H_2 and helps to shield it from dissociating radiation. In this study we point out that in the absence of significant pre-enrichment by Population III stars forming out of zero metallicity gas, such H_2-based star formation is expected to leave an imprint in the form of bi-modality in the metallicity distribution among dwarf galaxies and in the metallicity distribution of stars within individual galaxies. The bi-modality arises because when gas metallicity (and dust abundance) is low, formation of molecular gas is inefficient, the gas consumption time…
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