English

Low-temperature primordial gas in merging halos

Astrophysics 2011-08-31 v1

Abstract

Thermal regime of the baryons behind shock waves arising in the process of virialization of dark matter halos is governed at cetrain conditions by radiation of HD lines. A small fraction of the shocked gas can cool down to the temperature of the cosmic microwave background (CMB). We estimate an upper limit for this fraction: at z=10z=10 it increases sharply from about qT103q_{_T}\sim 10^{-3} for dark halos of M=5×107\msunM=5\times 10^7\msun to 0.1\sim 0.1 for halos with M=108\msunM=10^8\msun. Further increase of the halo mass does not lead however to a significant growth of qTq_T -- the asymptotic value for M108\msunM\gg 10^8\msun is of 0.3. We estimate star formation rate associated with such shock waves, and show that they can provide a small but not negligible fraction of the star formation. We argue that extremely metal-poor low-mass stars in the Milky Way may have been formed from primordial gas behind such shocks.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0807.3417,
  title  = {Low-temperature primordial gas in merging halos},
  author = {E. O. Vasiliev and Yu. A. Shchekinov},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0807.3417},
  year   = {2011}
}

Comments

7 pages, 5 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:02:59.983Z