Recent studies of heavy r-process elements in low-[Fe/H] halo stars have suggested that an initial population of metal-free very massive stars (VMSs) may be required to provide early Fe enrichment without coproducing heavy r nuclei. We find similar abundance trends in a-elements (which should be copiously produced by VMSs) but not in other elements such as carbon (which should not), in agreement with this hypothesis. We then combine the corresponding level of prompt initial enrichment with models of VMS nucleosynthetic yields and spectra to estimate the corresponding ionizing fluxes. The result suggests that there may have been enough VMS activity to reionize the universe. The unusually hard spectrum of VMSs would imply a different reionization history from canonical models. He ii could have been reionized at high redshift only to recombine as a subsequent generation of stars formed with a "normal" initial mass function.

Oh, S., Nollett, K., Madau, P., Wasserburg, G. (2001). DID very massive stars preenrich and reionize the universe?. THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 562(1), 1-4 [10.1086/337996].

DID very massive stars preenrich and reionize the universe?

Madau P;
2001

Abstract

Recent studies of heavy r-process elements in low-[Fe/H] halo stars have suggested that an initial population of metal-free very massive stars (VMSs) may be required to provide early Fe enrichment without coproducing heavy r nuclei. We find similar abundance trends in a-elements (which should be copiously produced by VMSs) but not in other elements such as carbon (which should not), in agreement with this hypothesis. We then combine the corresponding level of prompt initial enrichment with models of VMS nucleosynthetic yields and spectra to estimate the corresponding ionizing fluxes. The result suggests that there may have been enough VMS activity to reionize the universe. The unusually hard spectrum of VMSs would imply a different reionization history from canonical models. He ii could have been reionized at high redshift only to recombine as a subsequent generation of stars formed with a "normal" initial mass function.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Cosmology: theory; Early universe; Galaxies: formation; Stars: abundances On-line material: color figure;
English
2001
562
1
1
4
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Oh, S., Nollett, K., Madau, P., Wasserburg, G. (2001). DID very massive stars preenrich and reionize the universe?. THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 562(1), 1-4 [10.1086/337996].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/453348
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