. 24/7 Space News .
Discovery Of The Most Metal-Deficient Star Ever Found

Spectra of HE1327-2326 and the Sun. The upper panel shows low-resolution spectra covering the optical wavelength range, with a spectral image of the Sun. The lower panel shows an ultraviolet range spectrum of HE1327-2326 obtained with the Subaru Telescope, comparing with a solar one. Image courtesy: Subaru Telescope National Astronomical Observatory of Japan.

Hamburg, Germany (SPX) Apr 14, 2005
An international team of astronomers has reported the discovery of a star, HE1327-2326, which sets a new record for being the most heavy element-deficient star ever found.

Its chemical composition, as measured with the Subaru Telescope High Dispersion Spectrograph, provides evidence of nucleosynthesis by the first generations of stars in the universe, and places new constraints on their masses and metal enrichment history in the very early universe.

The first generation of stars are believed to have formed several hundred million years after the Big Bang, which occurred almost 14 billion years ago.

These stars were part of the transition from a universe that consisted only of hydrogen and helium gas to one that contains a variety of elements and objects including stars and galaxies.

Recent theoretical studies of the first stars to form in the universe suggest the formation of super-massive stars (several hundred times heavier than the Sun and not seen in the present-day Milky Way galaxy).

In addition, the theories do not predict the formation of low-mass stars like the Sun in the early universe. There is, however, no clear observational evidence for these predictions to date.

One approach to this problem is to investigate very old stars in our galaxy. These contain only small amounts of heavy elements, in particular iron.

Their abundance patterns constrain the nucleosynthesis models of first-generation stars and their mass distribution.

First-generation low-mass stars, which contain essentially no heavy elements, may also be found among such iron-deficient stellar populations.

The astronomers conducting the observational program focused on these very old stars discovered that HE1327-2326 had the lowest iron abundance ever seen.

It was first identified as a metal-poor candidate through the Hamburg/ESO survey, carried out with the European Southern Observatory 1.5-meter Schmidt Telescope.

The star's extremely low abundance of heavy elements was measured through spectroscopy with the ESO 3.6-meter telescope.

The Subaru observation using the High Dispersion Spectrograph (HDS), coupled with photometry from the MAGNUM Telescope, revealed that the star's iron abundance is only 1/250,000 that of the Sun, but the carbon and nitrogen abundance ratios relative to iron are remarkably high.

These are common properties with another iron-deficient star, HE0107-5240, which was found in 2001.

This result suggests that the metal-enrichment histories of these two stars are quite different from that of other low-metal stars.

The elemental abundance pattern of HE1327-2326 measured with Subaru/HDS, and comparisons with that of HE0107-5240, provide new understanding of the nucleosynthesis of first-generation stars and their formation processes.

A possible scenario to explain the chemical abundance patterns of these stars is to assume the existence of "peculiar" supernovae that provided only small amounts of heavy elements like iron.

In this case, then, the star we are currently observing should be a "second generation" star "seeded" with heavy elements by a first-generation supernova.

Supernova models proposed by astronomers in the University of Tokyo explain the chemical abundance patterns of the two objects.

According to these models, the progenitors were not supermassive stars, but stars with several tens of solar masses.

An alternative possibility is that HE1327-2326 is a first-generation star formed from the initial gas component of the very early universe.

If so, then the heavy elements found in this object could be the result of pollution by interstellar matter containing heavy elements.

Yet another process is required to explain the high abundances of light elements such as carbon.

Although the chemical abundance patterns of the star discovered by the present study is not yet completely understood, the abundances observed with the Subaru Telescope provide strong constraints on the formation scenarios of most iron-deficient stars.

Further detailed observations of this object, as well as theoretical studies on stellar evolution and formation, will promote our understanding of the characteristics of the first stars in the universe.

These results will be published in the April 15, 2005, issue of Nature.

Related Links
Subaru Telescope
University of Tokyo
The UK Schmidt Telescope
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Scientists Track Collision Of Powerful Stellar Winds
Victoria BC (SPX) Apr 12, 2005
Astronomers using the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) radio telescope have tracked the motion of a violent region where the powerful winds of two giant stars slam into each other.







  • Michael D. Griffin To Become NASA Administrator
  • Michael D. Griffin To Become NASA Administrator
  • Fourth European Conference On Space Debris To Address Key Issues
  • Two Tourists To Visit ISS In 2006-2007

  • Mars Science Lab's Laser To Fast Track Discovery Of Martian Life
  • Opportunity Visits Twin Craters Viking And Voyager
  • NASA Testing Human-Robot Interactions In Utah Desert
  • Spirit Switchbacking Uphill

  • US Ready To Destroy Rocket To Protect Canadian Oil Platforms
  • Orbital Minotaur launches XSS-11 Research Satellite
  • Orbital Successfully Launches New Medium Range Target For MDA
  • Beyond-Earth Enterprises and XCOR To Offer Small Payload Launcher

  • Drilling Vessel Recovers Rocks From Earth's Crust Far Below Seafloor
  • Remote Sensing Helps New Caledonia Monitor Sediment Erosion
  • Climatologists Discover Deep-Sea Secret
  • Rate Of Atmospheric Co2 Increase Returns To Average, NOAA Reports

  • Ball Aerospace Delivers Imaging Instrument For NASA's Mission To Pluto
  • Case Of Sedna's Missing Moon Solved
  • Pluto's Horizon Gets Page One Treatment At NASA.gov
  • NASA Awards Contract For Kepler Mission Photometer

  • Discovery Of The Most Metal-Deficient Star Ever Found
  • Scientists Track Collision Of Powerful Stellar Winds
  • In The Stars: Nature's Atom-Smasher
  • Cosmic Death Rays

  • Lunar Region Receiving Permanent Sunlight Opens Way For Future Colony
  • ESA Council Gives Go-Ahead To Cooperation With India's Lunar Mission
  • Chandrayaan-I: ISRO Selects American Geologist To Map Moon
  • First "Private" Lunar Mission Succeeded Despite NASA Roadblocks

  • CSI To Become Largest Supplier of Agricultural GPS Guidance Products
  • KVH Fiber Optic Gyros Make Automated Inventory Tracking Easy, Affordable
  • Satamatics Launches Ocean Alert Map Viewer Product
  • GPS Production Value Globally Expected To Grow To $21.5 Billion In 2008

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement