Department of Physics, School of Science, The University of Tokyo.
Kavli Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe (WPI), UTIAS, The University of Tokyo.
Proc Jpn Acad Ser B Phys Biol Sci. 2019;95(1):17-28. doi: 10.2183/pjab.95.002.
Modern sky surveys using large ground-based telescopes have discovered a variety of celestial objects. Prominent structures such as galaxies and galaxy clusters are found virtually everywhere, and their collective distribution forms the large-scale structure of the Universe. It is thought that all of the rich content in the present-day Universe developed through gravitational amplification of primeval density fluctuations generated in the very early phase of cosmic evolution. The standard theoretical model based on an array of recent observations accurately predicts the physical conditions in the early Universe, and powerful super-computers allow us to simulate in detail the formation and evolution of cosmic structure to the present epoch. We review recent progress in the study on the first generation of stars and blackholes. We focus on the physics of early structure formation, while identifying several key issues and open questions. Finally, we discuss prospects for future observations of the first stars, galaxies and blackholes.
现代的天体测量使用大型地面望远镜,已经发现了各种各样的天体。几乎在任何地方都可以找到星系和星系团等突出的结构,它们的集体分布构成了宇宙的大尺度结构。据认为,宇宙中现今所有的丰富内容都是通过早期宇宙演化中产生的原始密度涨落的引力放大而发展起来的。基于一系列最新观测的标准理论模型准确地预测了早期宇宙的物理条件,强大的超级计算机使我们能够详细模拟宇宙结构的形成和演化至今。我们回顾了第一代恒星和黑洞研究的最新进展。我们专注于早期结构形成的物理学,同时确定了几个关键问题和未解决的问题。最后,我们讨论了未来观测第一代恒星、星系和黑洞的前景。