Probing Pre-galactic Metal Enrichment with High-Redshift Gamma-Ray Bursts
F. Y. Wang, Volker Bromm, Thomas H. Greif, Athena Stacy, Z. G. Dai,, Abraham Loeb, K. S. Cheng

TL;DR
This paper investigates how high-redshift gamma-ray bursts can be used to study early universe metal enrichment by analyzing their afterglows and metal absorption lines, providing insights into the first stars and galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces a method to use Pop III GRB afterglows to probe pre-galactic metal enrichment and distinguish supernova types in the early universe.
Findings
GRB afterglows detectable at z>20 with JWST and VLA
Metal absorption lines can reveal the nature of first supernovae
Predicted afterglow flux peaks shift from near-IR to millimeter bands
Abstract
We explore high-redshift gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) as promising tools to probe pre-galactic metal enrichment. We utilize the bright afterglow of a Pop III GRB exploding in a primordial dwarf galaxy as a luminous background source, and calculate the strength of metal absorption lines that are imprinted by the first heavy elements in the intergalactic medium (IGM). To derive the GRB absorption line diagnostics, we use an existing highly-resolved simulation of the formation of a first galaxy which is characterized by the onset of atomic hydrogen cooling in a halo with virial temperature >10^4 K. We explore the unusual circumburst environment inside the systems that hosted Pop III stars, modeling the density evolution with the self-similar solution for a champagne flow. For minihalos close to the cooling threshold, the circumburst density is roughly proportional to (1+z) with values of about…
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