The detection and characterization of highly magnified stars with JWST: Prospects of finding Population III
Erik Zackrisson, Adam Hultquist, Aron Kordt, Jos\'e M. Diego, Armin, Nabizadeh, Anton Vikaeus, Ashish Kumar Meena, Adi Zitrin, Guglielmo Volpato,, Emma Lundqvist, Brian Welch, Guglielmo Costa, Rogier A. Windhorst

TL;DR
This paper models the spectral energy distributions of high-redshift stars, explores the bias in detecting lensed stars, and assesses JWST's potential to observe Population III stars under specific conditions.
Contribution
It introduces Muspelheim, a model for high-redshift stellar spectra, and evaluates JWST's prospects for detecting Population III stars through gravitational lensing.
Findings
Lensed stars are biased towards evolved, cooler stages.
Detection of Population III stars requires specific conditions like a top-heavy IMF.
JWST could detect massive Population III stars at high redshifts with large lensing surveys.
Abstract
Gravitational lensing may render individual high-mass stars detectable out to cosmological distances, and several extremely magnified stars have in recent years been detected out to redshifts . Here, we present Muspelheim, a model for the evolving spectral energy distributions of both metal-enriched and metal-free stars at high redshifts. Using this model, we argue that lensed stars should form a highly biased sample of the intrinsic distribution of stars across the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, and that this bias will typically tend to favour the detection of lensed stars in evolved stages characterized by low effective temperatures, even though stars only spend a minor fraction of their lifetimes in such states. We also explore the prospects of detecting individual, lensed metal-free (Population III) stars at high redshifts using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
