The metal and dust yields of the first massive stars
S. Marassi, R. Schneider, M. Limongi, A. Chieffi, M. Bocchio, S., Bianchi

TL;DR
This study models dust production by the first massive stars' supernovae, showing how ejecta mixing and fallback influence dust mass and composition, with implications for early cosmic dust enrichment.
Contribution
It provides detailed predictions of dust yields and compositions from Population III supernovae, considering different explosion scenarios and dust survival rates.
Findings
Standard Pop III SNe produce 0.18-3.1 Msun of dust, mainly silicates.
Faint Pop III SNe produce primarily amorphous carbon dust.
Survivability of dust varies from 3% to 80% depending on conditions.
Abstract
We quantify the role of Population (Pop) III core-collapse supernovae (SNe) as the first cosmic dust polluters. Starting from a homogeneous set of stellar progenitors with masses in the range [13 - 80] Msun, we find that the mass and composition of newly formed dust depend on the mixing efficiency of the ejecta and the degree of fallback experienced during the explosion. For standard Pop III SNe, whose explosions are calibrated to reproduce the average elemental abundances of Galactic halo stars with [Fe/H] < -2.5, between 0.18 and 3.1 Msun (0.39 - 1.76 Msun) of dust can form in uniformly mixed (unmixed) ejecta, and the dominant grain species are silicates. We also investigate dust formation in the ejecta of faint Pop III SN, where the ejecta experience a strong fallback. By examining a set of models, tailored to minimize the scatter with the abundances of carbon-enhanced Galactic halo…
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