Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2002-12-12
AIP Conf.Proc. 666 (2003) 93-96
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
4 pages; To appear in proceedings of the 13th Annual Astrophysics Conference in Maryland: The Emergence of Cosmic Structure, e
Scientific paper
10.1063/1.1581776
How massive were the first stars? This question is of fundamental importance for galaxy formation and cosmic reionization. Here we consider how protostellar feedback can limit the mass of a forming star. For this we must understand the rate at which primordial protostars accrete, how they and their feedback output evolve, and how this feedback interacts with the infalling matter. We describe the accretion rate with an ``isentropic accretion'' model: the rate is initially very large (~0.03 M_sun/yr when m_* =1 M_sun) and declines as m_*^{-3/7}. Protostellar evolution is treated with a model that tracks the total energy of the star. A key difference compared to previous studies is allowance for rotation of the infalling envelope. This leads to photospheric conditions at the star and dramatic differences in the feedback. Two feedback mechanisms are considered: HII region breakout and radiation pressure from Lyman-alpha and FUV photons. Radiation pressure appears to be the dominant mechanism for suppressing infall, becoming dynamically important around 20 M_sun.
McKee Christopher F.
Tan Jonathan C.
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