Carbon-Enhanced Metal-Poor Stars: Relics from the Dark Ages
Ryan Cooke (1), Piero Madau (1) ((1) University of California, Santa, Cruz)

TL;DR
This paper models the early universe's chemical enrichment, explaining the prevalence of carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars through supernova energy and gas retention in minihalos, aligning with observed star compositions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model linking supernova energy to CEMP star formation, reproducing observed distributions without free parameters.
Findings
Models match observed [C/Fe] and [Fe/H] distributions.
High-energy supernovae evacuate gas, suppressing second-generation stars.
Most Fe-poor stars may originate from multiple first stars.
Abstract
We use detailed nucleosynthesis calculations and a realistic prescription for the environment of the first stars to explore the first episodes of chemical enrichment that occurred during the dark ages. Based on these calculations, we propose a novel explanation for the increased prevalence of carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars with decreasing Fe abundance: The observed chemistry for the most metal-poor Galactic halo stars is the result of an intimate link between the explosions of the first stars and their host minihalo's ability to retain its gas. Specifically, high-energy supernovae produce a near solar ratio of C/Fe, but are effective in evacuating the gas from their host minihalo, thereby suppressing the formation of a second generation of stars. On the other hand, minihalos that host low-energy supernovae are able to retain their gas and form a second stellar generation but,…
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