The First Stars: formation under X-ray feedback
Jacob A. Hummel, Athena Stacy, Myoungwon Jeon, Anthony Oliveri, Volker, Bromm

TL;DR
This study explores how cosmic X-ray backgrounds influence the formation of the first stars, revealing that star formation characteristics remain largely unaffected despite varying X-ray intensities.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based analysis of CXB effects on Population III star formation, highlighting the minimal impact on star properties.
Findings
CXB causes early gas cooling and collapse
Star formation properties are insensitive to CXB strength
Gas becomes optically thick, shielding from X-rays
Abstract
We investigate the impact of a cosmic X-ray background (CXB) on Population III stars forming in a minihalo at . Using the smoothed particle hydrodynamics code GADGET-2, we attain sufficient numerical resolution to follow gas collapsing into the centre of the minihalo from cosmological initial conditions up to densities of , at which point we form sink particles. This allows us to study how the presence of a CXB affects the formation of H and HD in the gas prior to becoming fully molecular. Using a suite of simulations for a range of possible CXB models, we follow each simulation for 5000\yr after the first sink particle forms. The CXB provides two competing effects, with X-rays both heating the gas and increasing the free electron fraction, allowing more H to form. X-ray heating dominates below , while the additional…
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