The Astrophysical Journal Letters (Jan 2024)

True Pair-instability Supernova Descendant: Implications for the First Stars’ Mass Distribution

  • Ioanna Koutsouridou,
  • Stefania Salvadori,
  • Ása Skúladóttir

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ad2466
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 962, no. 2
p. L26

Abstract

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The initial mass function (IMF) of the first Population III (Pop III) stars remains a persistent mystery. Their predicted massive nature implies the existence of stars exploding as pair-instability supernovae (PISNe), but no observational evidence had been found. Now, the LAMOST survey claims to have discovered a pure PISN descendant, J1010+2358, at [Fe/H] = − 2.4. Here we confirm that a massive 250–260 M _⊙ PISN is needed to reproduce the abundance pattern of J1010+2358. However, the PISN contribution can be as low as 10%, since key elements are missing to discriminate between scenarios. We investigate the implications of this discovery for the Pop III IMF, by statistical comparison with the predictions of our cosmological galaxy formation model, NEFERTITI . First, we show that the nondetection of mono-enriched PISN descendants at [Fe/H] 191.16 x − 132.44, where x is the slope, at a 75% confidence level. Second, we show that if J1010+2358 has only inherited 90%) PISN descendant, it will offer strong and complementary constraints on the Pop III IMF, excluding the steepest and bottom-heaviest IMFs: m _ch / M _⊙ < 143.21 x − 225.94. Our work shows that even a single detection of a pure PISN descendant can be crucial to our understanding of the mass distribution of the first stars.

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