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We study the influence of low levels of metal enrichment on the cooling and collapse of ionized gas in small protogalactic halos using three-dimensional, smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations. Our initial conditions represent protogalaxies forming within a fossil HII region -- a previously ionized HII region which has not yet had time to cool and recombine. Prior to cosmological reionization, such regions should be relatively common, since the characteristic lifetimes of the likely ionizing sources are significantly shorter than a Hubble time. We show that in these regions, H_2 is the dominant and most effective coolant, and that it is the amount of H_2 formed that determines whether or not the gas can collapse and form stars. At the low metallicities (Z < 10^{-3} Z_sun) thought to be associated with the transition from population III to early population II star formation, metal line cooling has an almost negligible effect on the evolution of low density gas, altering the density and temperature evolution of the gas by less than 1% compared to the metal-free case at densities below 1 cm^{-3} and temperatures above 2000 K. Although there is evidence that metal line cooling becomes more effective at higher density, we find no significant differences in behaviour from the metal-free case at any density below our sink particle creation threshold at n = 500 cm^{-3}. Increasing the metallicity also increases the importance of metal line cooling, but it does not significantly affect the dynamical evolution of the low density gas until Z = 0.1 Z_sun. This result holds regardless of whether or not an ultraviolet background is present.
We present a simplified chemical and thermal model designed to allow computationally efficient study of the thermal evolution of metal-poor gas within large numerical simulations. Our main simplification is the neglect of the molecular chemistry of t
Population III stars are believed to have been more massive than typical stars today and to have formed in relative isolation. The thermodynamic impact of metals is expected to induce a transition leading to clustered, low-mass Population II star for
The formation of the first stars out of metal-free gas appears to result in stars at least an order of magnitude more massive than in the present-day case. We here consider what controls the transition from a primordial to a modern initial mass funct
We study gravitational collapse of low-metallicity gas clouds and the formation of protostars by three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations. Grain growth, non-equilibrium chemistry, molecular cooling, and chemical heating are solved in a self-consist
Primordial star formation appears to result in stars at least an order of magnitude more massive than modern star formation. It has been proposed that the transition from primordial to modern initial mass functions occurs due to the onset of effectiv