Gravitational collapse and the thermal evolution of low-metallicity gas clouds in the early Universe
Gen Chiaki, Naoki Yoshida, Shingo Hirano

TL;DR
This study uses advanced 3D hydrodynamic simulations to explore how low-metallicity gas clouds in the early Universe collapse and form stars, revealing the complex interplay of cooling, heating, and fragmentation processes.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent model including grain growth, chemistry, and cooling with high resolution, providing new insights into star formation at extremely low metallicities.
Findings
Cloud fragmentation depends on metallicity and collapse timescale.
Chemical heating can prevent fragmentation despite dust cooling.
Filamentation and disk self-gravity drive different fragmentation modes.
Abstract
We study gravitational collapse of low-metallicity gas clouds and the formation of protostars by three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations. Grain growth, non-equilibrium chemistry, molecular cooling, and chemical heating are solved in a self-consistent manner for the first time. We employ the realistic initial conditions for the abundances of metal and dust, and the dust size distribution obtained from recent Population III supernova calculations. We also introduce the state-of-the-art particle splitting method based on the Voronoi tessellation and achieve an extremely high mass resolution of ~10^{-5} Msun (10 earth masses) in the central region. We follow the thermal evolution of several early clouds with various metallicities. We show that the condition for cloud fragmentation depends not only on the gas metallicity but also on the collapse timescale. In many cases, the cloud…
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