Title: The First Stars and Black Holes
1The First Stars and Black Holes
2Stars today
- Old and young populations (I and II)
- Different histories
- Different chemical makeup
- Initial material (sampled between galaxies)
almost pure H/He - No known stars so metal-poor
- So - where are the Old Ones?
3Starbirth
- Interstellar gas/dust common
- Gas must cool to collapse
- Dust grains and heavy elements are important in
this (coolants) - Hydrogen/helium stars would be different
4Pure H/He starbirth
- Only very massive stars could collapse
- Only minimal cooling from molecular H
- Likely 80-300 solar masses, maybe more
- One to a protogalaxy theyre fratricidal
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6They blew up real good
- Up to 10x energy of type Ia supernova
- Up to 40 of mass released in O,C
- Seeded future galaxies and gas between (which we
now see is slightly enriched) - Enough heavy elements for normal star formation
to ensue - But galaxy formation had to start twice!
7Closest local analogs the most massive stars
8Can we see them?
- Dont come in clusters
- Short-lived
- High-redshift (pure infrared targets)
- Dont blow their mass away in winds
- Their explosions bright enough to see and there
should be one seen about every 8 seconds.
Somewhere in the sky.
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10Have we already seen them?
- Gamma-ray bursts have finally been associated
with asymmetric supernovae - Some bright bursts have no optical/near-infrared
afterglow - Are these at still higher redshifts?
11Digression Gamma-ray bursts
- Discovered by Vela satellites
- No pattern on sky
- Compton statistics indicate very distant
- BeppoSAXground fading afterglow in optical,
high redshift, host galaxy - Later bursts some have optical/X-ray signature
of fading supernova - Collapsar picture
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13Fading afterglow Of GRB 991216 (z1) Near-infrared
bands
14Collapsar model
- Hot neutron star or black holes forms in center
of explosion - Temporary high-density surrounding disk
- Directs relativistic jets
- Gives stellar surface very rude surprise
- Boosted to gamma rays if we look along the jet
(so there are many more of these than we see)
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16Finding Pop III (VMOs, SMOs)
- Look for their supernovae in IR (important in
JWSTs survey strategy) - Look for deep-IR-only GRB afterglows
- Early ionization input seen by WMAP??
- Understand chemical prehistory of stars
- Look for their remnant black holes
- Read Stephen Baxters Vacuum Diagrams
17And speaking of black holes where did the first
massive ones come from?
18The Problem(s)
- Most bright galaxies have a supermassive central
black hole - Only some of these are now accreting and easy to
find - Quasars are now known to redshift 6 (about t800
million years) - Which have black holes just as massive as we see
later on. How did they do that? - And have gas as metal-rich as we see later!
19Nearby supermassive black holes
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21How could black holes jump-start?
- Direct formation from collapsing gas
- Primordial objects
- Dense relativistic star clusters
- More exotic objects collapsing?
- Are primordial stars even more massive than we
thought?
22Gas around quasars enriched!
- Spectra of quasars at all times show very similar
metal abundances - Most heavy metals come from supernovae
- Are all quasars in sites of intense and early
starbirth (and stardeath)? - Could the quasars have triggered this?
- Were starting to look earlier than the age of a
type I supernova, should see iron decline
23Composite of high-redshift quasars
24H
N
Absorption by intergalactic gas
Si