The very first stars to form in the universe heralded an end to the cosmic dark ages and introduced new physical processes that shaped early cosmic evolution. Until now, it was thought that these stars lived short, solitary lives, with only one extremely massive star, or possibly a very wide binary system, forming in each dark-matter minihalo. Here we describe numerical simulations that show that these stars were, to the contrary, often members of tight multiple systems. Our results show that the disks that formed around the first young stars were unstable to gravitational fragmentation, possibly producing small binary and higher-order systems that had separations as small as the distance between Earth and the Sun
Binary and multiple star systems are a frequent outcome of the star formation process(1,2) and as a ...
A large population of fragile, wide (> 1000 AU) binary systems exists in the Galactic field and halo...
Observations of stars in the vicinity of the Sun show that binary systems are prevalent and appear t...
The very first stars to form in the universe heralded an end to the cosmic dark ages and introduced ...
We investigate the formation of the first stars at the end of the cosmic dark ages with a suite of t...
The cosmic dark ages ended a few hundred million years after the big bang, when the first stars bega...
Numerical simulations of protostars condensing out of turbulent interstellar gas clouds suggest that...
We characterize the infall rate onto protostellar systems forming in self-gravitating radiation-hydr...
Almost all young stars are found in multiple systems. This suggests that protostellar cores almost a...
A large population of fragile, wide (> 10(3) AU) binary systems exists in the Galactic field and ...
The cosmic dark ages ended a few hundred million years after the big bang, when the first stars bega...
We describe in detail one of a sequence of numerical simulations which realize the mechanism of bina...
Context. There is growing evidence that massive stars grow by disk accretion in a similar way to the...
Binary and multiple star systems are a frequent outcome of the star formation process(1,2) and as a ...
A large population of fragile, wide (> 1000 AU) binary systems exists in the Galactic field and halo...
Observations of stars in the vicinity of the Sun show that binary systems are prevalent and appear t...
The very first stars to form in the universe heralded an end to the cosmic dark ages and introduced ...
We investigate the formation of the first stars at the end of the cosmic dark ages with a suite of t...
The cosmic dark ages ended a few hundred million years after the big bang, when the first stars bega...
Numerical simulations of protostars condensing out of turbulent interstellar gas clouds suggest that...
We characterize the infall rate onto protostellar systems forming in self-gravitating radiation-hydr...
Almost all young stars are found in multiple systems. This suggests that protostellar cores almost a...
A large population of fragile, wide (> 10(3) AU) binary systems exists in the Galactic field and ...
The cosmic dark ages ended a few hundred million years after the big bang, when the first stars bega...
We describe in detail one of a sequence of numerical simulations which realize the mechanism of bina...
Context. There is growing evidence that massive stars grow by disk accretion in a similar way to the...
Binary and multiple star systems are a frequent outcome of the star formation process(1,2) and as a ...
A large population of fragile, wide (> 1000 AU) binary systems exists in the Galactic field and halo...
Observations of stars in the vicinity of the Sun show that binary systems are prevalent and appear t...