Formation of Compact Stellar Clusters by High-redshift Galaxy Outflows. II. Effect of Turbulence and Metal-line Cooling

In the primordial universe, low-mass structures with virial temperatures less than 104 K were unable to cool by atomic line transitions, leading to a strong suppression of star formation. On the other hand, these 'minihalos' were highly prone to triggered star formation by interactions fro...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2011-06, Vol.733 (2), p.88-jQuery1323907978958='48'
Hauptverfasser: Gray, William J, Scannapieco, Evan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In the primordial universe, low-mass structures with virial temperatures less than 104 K were unable to cool by atomic line transitions, leading to a strong suppression of star formation. On the other hand, these 'minihalos' were highly prone to triggered star formation by interactions from nearby galaxy outflows. In Gray & Scannapieco, we explored the impact of nonequilibrium chemistry on these interactions. Here we turn our attention to the role of metals, carrying out a series of high-resolution three-dimensional adaptive mesh refinement simulations that include both metal cooling and a subgrid turbulent mixing model. Despite the presence of an additional coolant, we again find that outflow-minihalo interactions produce a distribution of dense, massive stellar clusters. We also find that these clusters are evenly enriched with metals to a final abundance of Z 10--2 Z . As in our previous simulations, all of these properties suggest that these interactions may have given rise to present-day halo globular clusters.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.1088/0004-637X/733/2/88