If Dark Matter (DM) is composed by Weakly Interacting Massive Particles, its annihilation in the halos harboring the earliest star formation episode may strongly influence the first generation of stars (Population III). Whereas DM annihilation at early stages of gas collapse does not dramatically affect the properties of the cloud, the formation of a hydrostatic object (protostar) and its evolution toward the main sequence may be delayed. This process involves DM concentrated in the center of the halo by gravitational drag, and no consensus is yet reached over whether this can push the initial mass of Population III to higher masses. DM can also be captured through scattering over the baryons in a dense object, onto or very close to the Main Sequence. This mechanism can affect formed stars and in principle prolonge their lifetimes. The strength of both mechanisms depends upon several environmental conditions and on DM parameters; such spread in the parameter space leads to very different scenarios for the observables in the Population. Here I summarize the state of the art in modelling and observational expectations, eventually highlighting the most critical assumptions and reasons of uncertainty.

WIMP dark matter and the first stars: A critical overview / Iocco, F.. - In: POS PROCEEDINGS OF SCIENCE. - ISSN 1824-8039. - (2010). (Intervento presentato al convegno Workshop on Cosmic Radiation Fields: Sources in the Early Universe, CRF 2010 tenutosi a Hamburg, deu nel 2010).

WIMP dark matter and the first stars: A critical overview

Iocco F.
2010

Abstract

If Dark Matter (DM) is composed by Weakly Interacting Massive Particles, its annihilation in the halos harboring the earliest star formation episode may strongly influence the first generation of stars (Population III). Whereas DM annihilation at early stages of gas collapse does not dramatically affect the properties of the cloud, the formation of a hydrostatic object (protostar) and its evolution toward the main sequence may be delayed. This process involves DM concentrated in the center of the halo by gravitational drag, and no consensus is yet reached over whether this can push the initial mass of Population III to higher masses. DM can also be captured through scattering over the baryons in a dense object, onto or very close to the Main Sequence. This mechanism can affect formed stars and in principle prolonge their lifetimes. The strength of both mechanisms depends upon several environmental conditions and on DM parameters; such spread in the parameter space leads to very different scenarios for the observables in the Population. Here I summarize the state of the art in modelling and observational expectations, eventually highlighting the most critical assumptions and reasons of uncertainty.
2010
WIMP dark matter and the first stars: A critical overview / Iocco, F.. - In: POS PROCEEDINGS OF SCIENCE. - ISSN 1824-8039. - (2010). (Intervento presentato al convegno Workshop on Cosmic Radiation Fields: Sources in the Early Universe, CRF 2010 tenutosi a Hamburg, deu nel 2010).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/838237
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