Astronomy and astrophysics

A Cosmic Hide-and-seek: The Chemical Remains of the First Stars

by Torgny Karlsson (NORDITA)

Europe/Stockholm
FA31

FA31

Description
Extensive numerical calculations of the star formation process at the end of the so-called Cosmic Dark Ages, ~400 Myr after the Big Bang, predict a universe inhabited by a population of predominantly very massive stars with masses>100 M . If mass loss is limited, stars in the specific mass range 140<m/M <260 will end their lifes as pair-instability supernovae (PISNe), imprinting a unique chemical signature in the gas out of which later generations of stars were formed. However, inspite of several observational attempts, these signatures have to date remained undetected. Does this mean that the first stars were less massive than what is currently believed, or, are we perhaps looking in the wrong place?