Los puntos clave no están disponibles para este artículo en este momento.
Recent studies suggest that the initial mass function (IMF) of the first stars was likely to be extremely top-heavy, unlike what is observed at present. We propose a scenario to generate fragmentation to lower masses once the first massive stars have formed and derive constraints on the primordial IMF. We estimate the mass fraction of pair-unstable supernovae, shown to be the dominant sources of the first heavy elements. These metals enrich the gas up to ≈ 10−5 Z⊙, when a transition to efficient cooling-driven fragmentation occurs producing ∼ 1M ⊙ clumps. We argue that the remaining fraction of the first stars ends up in ≈ 100M ⊙ VMBHs (Very Massive Black Holes). If we further assume that all these VMBHs are likely to end up in the centers of galactic nuclei constituting the observed SMBHs, then ≈ 1 % of the first stars contributed to the initial metal enrichment and the IMF remained top-heavy down to a redshift z ≈ 10. Interestingly, this is the epoch at which the cool metals detected in the Lyα forest at z ≈ 3 must have been ejected from galaxies. At the other extreme
Schneider et al. (Mon,) studied this question.