Confined Population III Enrichment and the Prospects for Prompt Second-Generation Star Formation
Jeremy S. Ritter, Chalence Safranek-Shrader, Orly Gnat, Milos, Milosavljevic, Volker Bromm

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to show that less massive Population III stars with standard supernova energies can enrich their host minihalos with metals, potentially triggering second-generation star formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Population III supernovae with typical energies can partially trap ejecta, leading to localized enrichment and prompt formation of Population II stars.
Findings
Supernova remnants remain partially trapped within minihalos.
Approximately 1% of ejecta reach the center in 30 kyr.
Average metallicity of enriched material is 0.001-0.01 Z_sun.
Abstract
It is widely recognized that nucleosynthetic output of the first, Population III supernovae was a catalyst defining the character of subsequent stellar generations. Most of the work on the earliest enrichment was carried out assuming that the first stars were extremely massive and that the associated supernovae were unusually energetic, enough to completely unbind the baryons in the host cosmic minihalo and disperse the synthesized metals into the intergalactic medium. Recent work, however, suggests that the first stars may in fact have been somewhat less massive, with a characteristic mass scale of a few tens of solar masses. We present a cosmological simulation following the transport of the metals synthesized in a Population III supernova assuming that it had an energy of 1e51 ergs, compatible with standard Type II supernovae. A young supernova remnant is inserted in the first star's…
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