Earliest Universe Stars are...

Earliest Universe Stars are...

A Story by neurostar burns

For many decades scientists have sought out the calculated stellar presence of earliest stars known
to the universe dubbed Population III. It has been assumed that their actual presence have long
passed away being the first to conbust in the universe. Their passing, probably by supernovae,
would have spewed out chemicals upon which future stellar populations would have built on bringing
about what are called population II and present context population I. But the dissipated chemicals
would prove hard to detect.

On May 3, 2023, a report is released by a team. Using the European Space Observatory's Very Large Telescope,
they say they have detected three very distant clouds whose chemicals would match the anticipated residue
of the former population III stars. They are about 13.5 billion years old and were different from today's stars in
at least they were composed of hydrogen and helium and probably were huge compared to today's spectrum.


The article is found by: "Evidence of first stars-enriched gas in high-redshift absorbers." Can be found in the Astrophysical Journal.

A release can also be read in Phys.org.

© 2023 neurostar burns


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Added on May 5, 2023
Last Updated on May 6, 2023

Author

neurostar burns
neurostar burns

Phoenix



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Avid hot tea drinker, likes seafood and asian eateries and home cooked food including east asian, trail hikes, lecturing, being single, cosmology, sky watching, open natural vistas. more..

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