Astronomers Find an Elusive Star With Origins Close to Big Bang

The star is unusual because unlike other stars with very low metal content, it is part of the Milky Way’s “thin disk” — the part of the galaxy in which the Sun resides. (Image: via Pixabay)

Astronomers have found what could be one of the universe’s oldest stars, a body almost entirely made of materials spewed from the Big Bang. The discovery of this approximately 13.5 billion-year-old tiny star means more stars with very low mass and very low metal content are likely out there — perhaps even the universe’s very first stars.

The star is unusual because unlike other stars with very low metal content, it is part of the Milky Way’s “thin disk” — the part of the galaxy in which the sun resides. And because this star is so old, researchers say it’s possible that our galactic neighborhood is at least 3 billion years older than previously thought. The findings are published in The Astrophysical Journal.

Lead author Kevin Schlaufman, a Johns Hopkins University assistant professor in the Physics and Astronomy Department, said:

First stars after Big Bang

The universe’s first stars after the Big Bang would have consisted entirely of elements like hydrogen, helium, and small amounts of lithium. Those stars produced elements heavier than helium in their cores and seeded the universe with them when they exploded as supernovae.

The next generation of stars formed from clouds of material laced with those metals, incorporating them into their makeup. The metal content, or metallicity, of stars in the universe increased as the cycle of star birth and death continued. This star’s extremely low metallicity indicates that in a cosmic family tree, it could be as little as one generation removed from the Big Bang.

Indeed, it is the new record holder for the star with the smallest complement of heavy elements — it has about the same heavy element content as the planet Mercury.  In contrast, our sun is thousands of generations down that line and has a heavy element content equal to 14 Jupiters.

A newly discovered very small star is thought to be a remnant from the Big Bang.
The new discovery is only 14 percent the size of the Sun and is the new record holder for the star with the smallest complement of heavy elements. It has about the same heavy element complement as Mercury, the smallest planet in our solar system. (Image: Kevin Schlaufman via JHU)

Astronomers have found around 30 ancient “ultra metal-poor” stars with the approximate mass of the Sun. The star Schlaufman and his team found is only 14 percent the mass of the Sun. The star is part of a two-star system orbiting around a common point. The team found the tiny, almost invisibly faint “secondary” star after another group of astronomers discovered the much brighter “primary” star and measured its composition by studying a high-resolution optical spectrum of its light.

The presence or absence of dark lines in a star’s spectrum can identify the elements it contains, such as carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, iron, and more. In this case, the star had extremely low metallicity. Those astronomers also identified unusual behavior in the star system that implied the presence of a neutron star or black hole.

Schlaufman and his team found that to be incorrect, but in doing so they discovered the visible star’s much smaller companion. The existence of the smaller companion star turned out to be the big discovery. Schlaufman’s team was able to infer its mass by studying the primary star’s slight “wobble” as the little star’s gravity tugged at it.

As recently as the late 1990s, researchers believed that only massive stars could have formed in the earliest stages of the universe — and they could never be observed because they burn through their fuel and die so quickly. But as astronomical simulations became more sophisticated, they began to hint that in certain situations, a star from this time period with particularly low mass could still exist, even more than 13 billion years since the Big Bang.

Unlike huge stars, low-mass ones can live for exceedingly long times. Red dwarf stars, for instance, with a fraction of the mass of the Sun, are thought to live to trillions of years. The discovery of this new ultra metal-poor star, named 2MASS J18082002-5104378 B, opens up the possibility of observing even older stars. Schlaufman, who is also affiliated with the Institute for Data Intensive Engineering and Science, said:

This research is based on observations using the Magellan Clay Telescope, Las Campanas Observatory, and the Gemini Observatory.

Provided by: Johns Hopkins University [Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.]

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