Characterization of Population III Stars with Stellar Atmosphere and Evolutionary Modeling and Predictions of their Observability with the James Webb Space Telescope
Mikaela M. Larkin, Roman Gerasimov, and Adam J. Burgasser

TL;DR
This paper develops new stellar atmosphere and evolution models for Population III stars to predict their observable properties with JWST, aiding future detection efforts at high redshifts.
Contribution
It introduces comprehensive evolutionary and atmospheric models for Population III stars across a wide mass range, tailored for JWST observational predictions.
Findings
Models cover a broad mass range of Population III stars.
Synthetic photometry for JWST NIRCam bands is provided.
Predicted magnitudes and colors inform future JWST observations.
Abstract
Population III stars were the first stars to form after the Big Bang, and are believed to have made the earliest contribution to the metal content of the universe beyond the products of the Big Bang Nucleosynthesis. These stars are theorized to have had extremely short lifespans, and therefore would only be observable at high redshifts () and faint apparent magnitudes (). The direct detection of Population III stars therefore remains elusive. However, the recently launched James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) may be capable of detecting stars in the relevant magnitude range in the event of favorable gravitational lensing. Theoretical models are required to interpret these future observations. In this study, new evolutionary models and non-equilibrium model atmospheres were used to characterize the observable properties of zero-age main sequence Population…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
