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Master presentation: Konstantinos Topalakis

Science and Information Technology

Master thesis in Physics presentation. The title is "The Impact of Dark Matter Annihilation on Massive Protostellar Structures".

Examination
Date
18 Jun 2025
Time
14:00 - 15:00
Location
Gröna Rummet (Green Room), EDIT Building, Chalmers

The Impact of Dark Matter Annihilation on Massive Protostellar Structures

Abstract

In this work, we explore how self-annihilating dark matter can reshape the birth and evolution of primordial Population III.1 stars by incorporating Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) energy injection into a one-dimensional stellar evolution code (GENEC). By systematically varying ambient dark matter density, baryonic accretion rate, WIMP mass, and scattering cross-section, we identify the regimes in which annihilation heating overwhelms both gravitational contraction and nuclear burning, giving rise to bloated dark matter powered protostars that bypass the classical zero-age main-sequence. We show that only under sufficiently high dark matter densities does collapse stall, inflating the protostar onto a cool, Hayashi-like track and suppressing its thermonuclear ignition for up to 100,000 years, during which it can accrete to supermassive scales. These Pop III.1 protostars—appearing as cool, infrared-bright supergiants at high redshift—offer a viable pathway to seeding the supermassive black holes observed in the early universe.

 

Student: Konstantinos Topalakis

Supervisor: Prof. Jonathan Tan

Co-Supervisor: Dr. Devesh Nandal

Examiner: Prof. Maria Sundin

Opponent: Ioannis Moutsis