Nucleosynthesis of PopIII Core Collapse Supernovae

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the nucleosynthesis of Population III (Pop III) core collapse supernovae and their implications for extremely metal-poor stars. New theoretical models suggest that the mass range of Pop III stars significantly influences the production of elements like nitrogen and oxygen, with underproduction noted in standard models. Observations indicate early metallicity in quasar spectra and a prolonged re-ionization period, hinting at the existence of massive stars formed from primordial gas. The potential link between these stars and the formation of massive black holes in galactic centers is also explored, raising questions about the mass range of Pop III stars and their visibility. Overall, the findings highlight the speculative nature of our understanding of early cosmic evolution and the role of Pop III stars in it.
wolram
Gold Member
Dearly Missed
Messages
4,410
Reaction score
555
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0507340

Nucleosynthesis of PopIII Core Collapse Supernovae and the Abundances of Extremely Metal Poor Stars
Authors: Marco Limongi (INAF-OAR), Alessandro Chieffi (INAF-IAS)
Comments: 6 pages, 4 figure, Proceedings of the IAU Symp. No. 228 "From Lithium to Uranium: Elemental Tracers of Early Cosmic Evolution", V.Hill, P.Francois & F.Primas eds

We present a new analysis of the abundances observed in extremely metal poor stars based on both a new generation of theoretical presupernova models and explosions of zero metallicity massive stars and a new abundance analysis of an homogeneous sample of stars having [Fe/H]<-2.5 (Cayrel et al. 2004).
 
Astronomy news on Phys.org
What mass range for Pop III stars? From that paper
The two lower panels of Figure 2 shows the comparison between the AGV04 star and the ejecta provided by a generation of massive stars (in the mass range 13-80 M) averaged over a Salpeter IMF for two choices of the slope \alpha . In particular, in the standard case (\alpha=-2.35), where the low mass massive stars dominate, N and O are both underproduced while Al is quite well fitted. An opposite behavior is found when the slope of the IMF is lower (\alpha=- 0.35) and the relative contribution of the more massive stars is higher. In any case N is significantly underestimated because the high primary N production occurs in a very narrow mass interval around the 25 M.
So not so very massive after all...
I wonder, what about the [102 - 104]M range?
Garth
 
Last edited:
A very speculative paper in my estimation.
 
What does all this really mean?

~Kitty
 
misskitty said:
What does all this really mean?

~Kitty
That our knowledge of the first stars that formed out of the products of the BBN is very sketchy and speculative.

What we do know is:
1. There is very early metallicity observed in Lyman alpha forests of quasar spectra, back to z>6.
2. There was an extended period of re-ionisation of the IGM at an even earlier period prior to z=10.5.
3. Stars forming out of a primordial gas with little or zero metallicity would be more massive than PopI or PopII stars. This is because metallicity is important to radiate away energy to enable a proto-star to collapse; without it greater gravitational forces are required. Once formed massive stars are expected to have only short lifetimes and they and their demise are expected to have been very bright events. Such bright PopIII stars have not been observed, but it is conceivable that their hyper-novae could be the source of the background GRBs.
This population could therefore be the source of the re-ionisation and early metallicity, that is if there are enough of them.
4. There are massive black holes in galactic centres, which may have preceded and been part of the formation of the galaxies themselves.
5. There seems to be about 10X the amount of mass in galactic halos and clusters than can be directly observed. This may be partially or totally accounted for by BH's of various masses.

So it is probably correct to say that there are a lot of BHs about. Some of these may be the end product of a ubiquitous population of PopIII stars. The question is of what mass range, and why have these PopIII stars not been observed?

Garth
 
This thread is dedicated to the beauty and awesomeness of our Universe. If you feel like it, please share video clips and photos (or nice animations) of space and objects in space in this thread. Your posts, clips and photos may by all means include scientific information; that does not make it less beautiful to me (n.b. the posts must of course comply with the PF guidelines, i.e. regarding science, only mainstream science is allowed, fringe/pseudoscience is not allowed). n.b. I start this...
Today at about 4:30 am I saw the conjunction of Venus and Jupiter, where they were about the width of the full moon, or one half degree apart. Did anyone else see it? Edit: The moon is 2,200 miles in diameter and at a distance of 240,000 miles. Thereby it subtends an angle in radians of 2,200/240,000=.01 (approximately). With pi radians being 180 degrees, one radian is 57.3 degrees, so that .01 radians is about .50 degrees (angle subtended by the moon). (.57 to be more exact, but with...
Back
Top