The first low-mass stars: critical metallicity or dust-to-gas ratio?
Raffaella Schneider, Kazuyuki Omukai, Simone Bianchi, Rosa Valiante

TL;DR
This study investigates the conditions necessary for the formation of low-mass stars in the early universe, emphasizing the critical role of dust-to-gas ratio over metallicity alone, and derives a threshold for star formation.
Contribution
It identifies a minimum dust-to-gas ratio required for low-mass star formation and provides an analytic expression for this critical value based on dust properties.
Findings
Dust presence is crucial for low-mass star formation.
Fragmentation occurs at metallicities above ~10^{-4} Zsun without dust.
A critical dust-to-gas ratio Dcr = [2.6 - 6.3] x 10^{-9} enables low-mass star formation.
Abstract
We explore the minimal conditions which enable the formation of metal-enriched solar and sub-solar mass stars. We find that in the absence of dust grains, gas fragmentation occurs at densities nH ~ [10^4-10^5]cm^{-3} when the metallicity exceeds Z ~ 10^{-4} Zsun. The resulting fragmentation masses are > 10 Msun. The inclusion of Fe and Si cooling does not affect the thermal evolution as this is dominated by molecular cooling even for metallicities as large as Z = 10^{-2} Zsun. The presence of dust is the key driver for the formation of low-mass stars. We focus on three representative core-collapse supernova (SN) progenitors, and consider the effects of reverse shocks of increasing strength: these reduce the depletion factors, fdep = Mdust/(Mdust+Mmet), alter the shape of the grain size distribution function and modify the relative abundances of grain species and of metal species in the…
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