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tlongII
02-10-2014, 05:32 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/science/2014/02/10/australian-scientists-discover-oldest-known-star/?intcmp=latestnews

A team of Australian astronomers say they have identified the oldest known star in our universe -- one that formed a mere 200 million years after the Big Bang.

"This is the first time that we've been able to unambiguously say that we've found the chemical fingerprint of a first star," lead researcher, Stefan Keller of the Australian National University (ANU) research school of astronomy and astrophysics said in a press release.

The star, named SMSS J031300.36-670839.3, is estimated to be 13.6 billion years old and is much older than previous stars found in 2007 and 2013, which were believed to be 13.2 billion years old.

The astronomers analyzed the light from the star to determine its chemical makeup, and extrapolated its age from there.

"The telltale sign that the star is so ancient is the complete absence of any detectable level of iron in the spectrum of light emerging from the star," explained Keller.

The star was first spotted on January 2 in the Milky Way, 6,000 light years away from the Earth using the ANU Skymapper telescope.

"The stars we are finding number one in a million," team member Professor Mike Bessel said in a press release. "Finding such needles in a haystack is possible thanks to the ANU SkyMapper telescope that is unique in its ability to find stars with low iron from their color."

The newly discovered star was formed in the wake of a primordial star and had a mass 60 times that of our Sun.

"To make a star like our Sun, you take the basic ingredients of hydrogen and helium from the Big Bang and add an enormous amount of iron – the equivalent of about 1,000 times the Earth's mass," Keller said.

Keller explained that primordial stars were previously thought to have died in violent explosions which polluted space with iron. But his discovery shows signs of pollution of lighter elements like carbon and magnesium with no traces of iron.

"To make this ancient star, you need no more than an Australia-sized asteroid of iron and lots of carbon," Keller continued. "It's a very different recipe that tells us a lot about the nature of the first stars and how they died."

Keller and his team hope that their discovery will help resolve long-standing discrepancies between observations and predictions of the Big Bang.

"This is one of the first steps in understanding what those first stars were like," said Keller. "What this star has enabled us to do is record the fingerprint of those first stars."

The discovery was published in the latest edition of the journal Nature

DisAsTerBot
02-10-2014, 05:35 PM
awesome

RD2191
02-10-2014, 05:37 PM
In before "6,000 year old earth" retarded played out comment by atheist.

DisAsTerBot
02-10-2014, 05:37 PM
lol the defenses are up

RD2191
02-10-2014, 05:40 PM
It's just a retarded and played out comment. It isn't even funny or original.

baseline bum
02-10-2014, 05:46 PM
It was 60 solar masses? I always thought that was enough to collapse it into a stellar black hole once it ran out of fuel for fusion. Too bad the article says nothing about what kind of star it is.

DisAsTerBot
02-10-2014, 05:47 PM
so you aren't really interested in the article? You just came to this thread to make sure no one made a comment you find played out?

RD2191
02-10-2014, 05:56 PM
so you aren't really interested in the article? You just came to this thread to make sure no one made a comment you find played out?
And if I did? The article is interesting I just don't wanna see it turn into another 2 page debate about how old the earth is and all that mess.

xmas1997
02-10-2014, 06:41 PM
And if I did? The article is interesting I just don't wanna see it turn into another 2 page debate about how old the earth is and all that mess.

It is quite interesting.
And glad you got in your comment before the idiots chime in.
:lol

mouse
02-10-2014, 06:59 PM
So what are message boards for exactly?

mouse
02-10-2014, 07:07 PM
And why did we spend billions on the Hubble telescope when a couple of kangaroo smelling Aussie's have a better view of space?

Big Empty
02-10-2014, 07:16 PM
the ingredients for the sun sound like something we could make in our garage. have we ever made a tiny sun?

xmas1997
02-10-2014, 07:18 PM
And why did we spend billions on the Hubble telescope when a couple of kangaroo smelling Aussie's have a better view of space?

:lmao
The answer is obvious, because we could.

baseline bum
02-10-2014, 07:28 PM
the ingredients for the sun sound like something we could make in our garage. have we ever made a tiny sun?

Sorry man, your garage sun would have to be something like 3x-10x the mass of Jupiter to start fusion in the core. Otherwise you'd have a shitty brown dwarf tbh.

baseline bum
02-10-2014, 07:29 PM
:lmao
The answer is obvious, because we could.

That, and it and other space observatories like Chandra leading to the two most productive decades ever in cosmology.

mouse
02-10-2014, 08:00 PM
the ingredients for the sun sound like something we could make in our garage. have we ever made a tiny sun?

Sure! All you need is nothing. You see our universe exploded from nothing.

I'm sure if you look hard enough you may have some nothing in your garage.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=i&source=images&cd=&docid=UEShCHsvQPTLlM&tbnid=wpKHrJrIQ4idfM:&ved=0CAUQjRw&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwallacegsmith.wordpress.com%2F201 2%2F06%2F01%2Flawrence-krauss-please-report-to-the-woodshed%2F&ei=qHX5Ura0FYTIkAej0ICQAg&psig=AFQjCNFTJPWgTomo4_O2pjDgh-6R7EM_Rg&ust=1392166663577549

uswsWh7OaMM

xmas1997
02-10-2014, 08:17 PM
Sure! All you need is nothing. You see our universe exploded from nothing.

I'm sure if you look hard enough you may have some nothing in your garage.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=i&source=images&cd=&docid=UEShCHsvQPTLlM&tbnid=wpKHrJrIQ4idfM:&ved=0CAUQjRw&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwallacegsmith.wordpress.com%2F201 2%2F06%2F01%2Flawrence-krauss-please-report-to-the-woodshed%2F&ei=qHX5Ura0FYTIkAej0ICQAg&psig=AFQjCNFTJPWgTomo4_O2pjDgh-6R7EM_Rg&ust=1392166663577549

uswsWh7OaMM

:lmao
Lots of nothing all around us.

mouse
02-11-2014, 09:54 AM
If only the Scientists knew how foolish they make themselves look by supporting "a universe from nothing" theory.

Oh wait it's a fact according to the school text books.

Big Empty
02-11-2014, 10:13 AM
Sure! All you need is nothing. You see our universe exploded from nothing.I'm sure if you look hard enough you may have some nothing in your garage.https://www.google.com/url?sa=i&source=images&cd=&docid=UEShCHsvQPTLlM&tbnid=wpKHrJrIQ4idfM:&ved=0CAUQjRw&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwallacegsmith.wordpress.com%2F201 2%2F06%2F01%2Flawrence-krauss-please-report-to-the-woodshed%2F&ei=qHX5Ura0FYTIkAej0ICQAg&psig=AFQjCNFTJPWgTomo4_O2pjDgh-6R7EM_Rg&ust=1392166663577549uswsWh7OaMMLMAO NICE!