A-SLOTH reveals the nature of the first stars
Tilman Hartwig, Veronika Lipatova, Simon C. O. Glover, Ralf S. Klessen

TL;DR
This paper calibrates the A-SLOTH semi-analytical model to better understand the properties and formation of the first stars in the early Universe, using observational data and simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive calibration of A-SLOTH with nine observables, providing new constraints on PopIII star formation parameters and their uncertainties.
Findings
PopIII IMF slope is steeper than previously assumed.
Minimum and maximum stellar masses are constrained to 13.6 and 197 solar masses.
IMF parameters are poorly constrained, with significant variability possible.
Abstract
The first generation of stars (PopIII) are too dim to be observed directly and probably too short-lived to have survived for local observations. Hence, we rely on simulations and indirect observations to constrain the nature of the first stars. In this study, we calibrate the semi-analytical model A-SLOTH (Ancient Stars and Local Observables by Tracing Halos), designed for simulating star formation in the early Universe, using a likelihood function based on nine independent observables. These observables span Milky Way-specific and cosmologically representative variables, ensuring a comprehensive calibration process. This calibration methodology ensures that A-SLOTH provides a robust representation of the early Universe's star formation processes, aligning simulated values with observed benchmarks across a diverse set of parameters. The outcome of this calibration process is best-fit…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Scientific Research and Discoveries
