Abstract
Previous high-resolution cosmological simulations predicted that the first stars to appear in the early universe were very massive and formed in isolation. Here, we discuss a cosmological simulation in which the central 50 M® (where M® is the mass of the Sun) clump breaks up into two cores having a mass ratio of two to one, with one fragment collapsing to densities of 10"8 grams per cubic centimeter. The second fragment, at a distance of ~800 astronomical units, is also optically thick to its own cooling radiation from molecular hydrogen lines but is still able to cool via collision-induced emission. The two dense peaks will continue to accrete from the surrounding cold gas reservoir over a period of ~105 years and will likely form a binary star system.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Turk, M. J., Abel, T., & O’Shea, B. (2009). The formation of population III binaries from cosmological initial conditions. Science, 325(5940), 601–605. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1173540
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.