ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
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 III star formation is only possible in those minihaloes that form enough H$_{2}$ to cool on a short timescale. As H$_{2}$ cooling is more effective in more massive minihaloes, there is therefore a critical halo mass scale $M_{rm min}$ above which Population III star formation first becomes possible. Two important processes can alter this minimum mass scale: streaming of baryons relative to the dark matter and the photodissociation of H$_{2}$ by a high redshift Lyman-Werner (LW) background. In this paper, we present results from a set of high resolution cosmological simulations that examine the impact of these processes on $M_{rm min}$ and on $M_{rm ave}$ (the average minihalo mass for star formation), both individually and in combination. We show that streaming has a bigger impact on $M_{rm min}$ than the LW background, but also that both effects are additive. We also provide fitting functions quantifying the dependence of $M_{rm ave}$ and $M_{rm min}$ on the streaming velocity and the strength of the LW background.
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 matte
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
We investigate the process of metal-free star formation in the first galaxies with a high-resolution cosmological simulation. We consider the cosmologically motivated scenario in which a strong molecule-destroying Lyman-Werner (LW) background inhibit
Direct collapse black holes forming in pristine, atomically-cooling haloes at $z approx 10-20$ may act as the seeds of supermassive black holes (BH) at high redshifts. In order to create a massive BH seed, the host halo needs to be prevented from for
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