The Chemical Imprint of Silicate Dust on the Most Metal-Poor Stars
Alexander P. Ji (MIT), Anna Frebel (MIT), and Volker Bromm (UT Austin)

TL;DR
This study explores how silicate dust influences the formation of the earliest low-mass, metal-poor stars, revealing that dust cooling played a role alongside line cooling in the early universe.
Contribution
It introduces critical dust-to-gas ratios for silicon-based dust and compares theoretical predictions with observed silicon abundances in extremely metal-poor stars.
Findings
Silicate dust cooling is viable at certain densities and grain sizes.
Some ultra metal-poor stars have silicon abundances too low for dust cooling to explain their formation.
Early low-mass star formation likely involved both dust and line cooling pathways.
Abstract
We investigate the impact of dust-induced gas fragmentation on the formation of the first low-mass, metal-poor stars (< 1Msun) in the early universe. Previous work has shown the existence of a critical dust-to-gas ratio, below which dust thermal cooling cannot cause gas fragmentation. Assuming the first dust is silicon-based, we compute critical dust-to-gas ratios and associated critical silicon abundances ([Si/H]crit). At the density and temperature associated with protostellar disks, we find that a standard Milky Way grain size distribution gives [Si/H]crit = -4.5 +/- 0.1, while smaller grain sizes created in a supernova reverse shock give [Si/H]crit = -5.3 +/- 0.1. Other environments are not dense enough to be influenced by dust cooling. We test the silicate dust cooling theory by comparing to silicon abundances observed in the most iron-poor stars ([Fe/H] < -4.0). Several stars have…
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