Star formation in the first galaxies - III. Formation, evolution, and characteristics of the first stellar cluster
Chalence Safranek-Shrader, Michael Montgomery, Milos Milosavljevic,, Volker Bromm

TL;DR
This study simulates the formation and evolution of the first low-metallicity stellar cluster in a dwarf galaxy at high redshift, revealing insights into star formation processes under primordial conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed cosmological simulation incorporating adaptive mesh refinement, protostellar radiation, and chemical networks to model early star cluster formation.
Findings
30 protostellar cores formed with masses from 0.1 to 14.4 Msun
Massive stars grow via competitive accretion, lower-mass stars are ejected
Characteristic mass scale set by CMB temperature and dust-gas coupling
Abstract
We simulate the formation of a low metallicity (0.01 Zsun) stellar cluster in a dwarf galaxy at redshift z~14. Beginning with cosmological initial conditions, the simulation utilizes adaptive mesh refinement and sink particles to follow the collapse and evolution of gas past the opacity limit for fragmentation, thus resolving the formation of individual protostellar cores. A time- and location-dependent protostellar radiation field, which heats the gas by absorption on dust, is computed by integration of protostellar evolutionary tracks with the MESA code. The simulation also includes a robust non-equilibrium chemical network that self-consistently treats gas thermodynamics and dust-gas coupling. The system is evolved for 18 kyr after the first protostellar source has formed. In this time span, 30 sink particles representing protostellar cores form with a total mass of 81 Msun. Their…
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