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How, when and where the first stars formed are fundamental questions regarding the epoch of Cosmic Dawn. A second order effect in the fluid equations was recently found to make a significant contribution: an offset velocity between gas and dark matter, the so-called streaming velocity. Previous simulations of a limited number of low-mass dark matter haloes suggest that this streaming velocity can delay the formation of the first stars and decrease halo gas fractions and the halo mass function in the low mass regime. However, a systematic exploration of its effects in a large sample of haloes has been lacking until now. In this paper, we present results from a set of cosmological simulations of regions of the Universe with different streaming velocities performed with the moving mesh code AREPO. Our simulations have very high mass resolution, enabling us to accurately resolve minihaloes as small as $10^5 : {rm M_{odot}}$. We show that in the absence of streaming, the least massive halo that contains cold gas has a mass $M_{rm halo, min} = 5 times 10^{5} : {rm M_{odot}}$, but that cooling only becomes efficient in a majority of haloes for halo masses greater than $M_{rm halo,50%} = 1.6 times 10^6 : {rm M_{odot}}$. In regions with non-zero streaming velocities, $M_{rm halo, min}$ and $M_{rm halo,50%}$ both increase significantly, by around a factor of a few for each one sigma increase in the value of the local streaming velocity. As a result, in regions with streaming velocities $v_mathrm{stream} ge 3,sigma_mathrm{rms}$, cooling of gas in minihaloes is completely suppressed, implying that the first stars in these regions form within atomic cooling haloes.
The first stars in the Universe, the so-called Population III stars, form in small dark matter minihaloes with virial temperatures $T_{rm vir} < 10^{4}$~K. Cooling in these minihaloes is dominated by molecular hydrogen (H$_{2}$), and so Population II
We study the influence of a high baryonic streaming velocity on the formation of direct collapse black holes (DCBHs) with the help of cosmological simulations carried out using the moving mesh code {sc arepo}. We show that a streaming velocity that i
Models of the decoupling of baryons and photons during the recombination epoch predict the existence of a large-scale velocity offset between baryons and dark matter at later times, the so-called streaming velocity. In this paper, we use high resolut
The formation of globular clusters and their relation to the distribution of dark matter have long puzzled astronomers. One of the most recently-proposed globular cluster formation channels ties ancient star clusters to the large-scale streaming velo
The adiabatic index of H$_2,$ ($gamma_{mathrm{H_2}}$) is non-constant at temperatures between $100-10^4,mathrm{K}$ due to the large energy spacing between its rotational and vibrational modes. For the formation of the first stars at redshifts 20 and