Impact of Population III homogeneous stellar evolution on early cosmic reionisation
Yves Sibony, Boyuan Liu, Charlotte Simmonds, Georges Meynet, Volker, Bromm

TL;DR
This study explores how chemically homogeneous evolution in Population III stars, caused by fast rotation, could significantly increase their ionising power and influence early cosmic reionisation, but likely overestimates the effect.
Contribution
It models the impact of chemically homogeneous evolution in Pop III stars on reionisation, revealing increased ionising photon escape fractions and implications for cosmic reionisation history.
Findings
Halos with chemically homogeneous stars have twice the ionising photon escape fraction.
Overproduction of Thomson optical depth suggests CHE is unlikely in most Pop III stars.
Fast rotation significantly affects the ionising budget of early stars.
Abstract
Context: Population III (Pop III) stars may be fast rotating. An expected consequence of fast rotation is strong internal mixing that deeply affects their evolutionary tracks in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram and hence their ionising power. aims: We investigate the impact on the ionising power of Pop III stars in an extreme case of internal mixing, the one leading to chemically homogeneous evolution (CHE). In that situation, during the main sequence phase, the star keeps the same chemical composition from its center to its surface. Homogeneous stars have larger effective temperatures and luminosities than stars evolving non-homogeneously and thus are stronger ionising sources. Methods: The stellar evolution models are based on polytropes with a time varying hydrogen mass fraction. The ionisation model employs the self-similar champagne flow solution from Shu et al. (2002), as…
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