Astronomers find oldest known star

spaminator

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Astronomers find oldest known star
Reuters
First posted: Monday, February 10, 2014 02:48 PM EST | Updated: Monday, February 10, 2014 03:19 PM EST
SYDNEY – Australian astronomers have found the oldest known star in the universe, a discovery that may help to resolve a long-standing discrepancy between observations and predictions of the Big Bang billions of years ago.
Dr Stefan Keller, lead researcher at the Australian National University Research School, told Reuters his team had seen the chemical fingerprint of the “first star”. After 11 years of searching, the star was discovered using the SkyMapper telescope at the Siding Spring Observatory.
“This star was formed shortly after the Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago,” Keller said.
“It’s giving us insight into our fundamental place in the universe. What we’re seeing is the origin of where all the material around us that we need to survive came from.”
Simply put, the Big Bang was the inception of the universe, he said, with nothing before that event.
The ancient star is about 6,000 light years from Earth - relatively close in astronomical terms. It was one of 60 million stars photographed by SkyMapper in its first year.
“This is the first time we’ve unambiguously been able to say we’ve got material from the first generation of stars,” Keller said. “We’re now going to be able to put that piece of the jigsaw puzzle in its right place.”
The composition of the newly discovered star shows it formed in the wake of a primordial star, which had a mass 60 times that of our Sun.
Keller said it was previously thought primordial stars died in extremely violent explosions that polluted huge volumes of space with iron. But the ancient star shows signs of pollution with lighter elements such as carbon and magnesium - with no sign of iron.
“What that means is we had a long-held theory that the first stars to form would be extremely massive because they are formed out of pure hydrogen and helium,” he said.
“A star is like an onion - it has all these layers and the heaviest material like iron is right down in the core. The only thing to come out of it was the carbon and a little bit of magnesium from that supernova and that’s what we’re seeing today in the star that we’ve discovered.”
The discovery was published in the latest edition of the journal Nature.
Astronomers find oldest known star | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

Locutus

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Jun 18, 2007
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But they'll definitely notice interstellar gunboats, just like the Africans noticed maritime gunboats.

Bitch please, I'm a Halo Master.

Interstellar gunboats indeed.

'sides, interstellar gunboats...wasn't that a one-hit wonder for Klaatu?
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Ahh.., the British slave trade, them was the days!

Not slaves. Just any country which didn't behave itself.

We called it "gunboat diplomacy." We could make countries do as we say by sending a few Royal Navy ships off their coastline (if they had one).

Without gunboats they would have had their asses kicked.

You can say that about any country. You can't win wars and battles with no weapons.
 
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darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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Have anything better?

Enjoy
Redshift


Halton Arp: A Modern Day Galileo start here for explanation #1


Billions of Suns, Billions of Years
Cluster Collisions
Far Distance Runaround
Fingers of God
Gravitational Lensing Misused Again
Gravitational Lensing Used As Excuse Again
Having Faith in Edwin Hubble
Orion Stellar Nursery
Quasar in Front of a Galaxy
Quasars in Infrared are Still Nearby
Redshift Rosetta Stone
Redshifts and Microwaves
Stephan's Quintet Rekindles Controversy
The Picture that Won’t Go Away
The Pleiades Problem
The Search for Two Numbers
The Universe According to Arp
Thirty Years Later
 

Dexter Sinister

Unspecified Specialist
Oct 1, 2004
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Enjoy
Redshift
The request was for something better, not a heap of nonsense from a junk site run by people who talk a lot about physics and cosmology but can't actually do it. Redshift quantization, for instance, is explicable in conventional terms as a statistical artifact obviated by more and better observations with better instruments, and those improvements also show there's no good evidence that Arp's ideas about intrinsic redshift have any merit. Most of what you find at thunderbolts.info is based on obsolete data and misunderstandings of basic physics.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
The request was for something better, not a heap of nonsense from a junk site run by people who talk a lot about physics and cosmology but can't actually do it. Redshift quantization, for instance, is explicable in conventional terms as a statistical artifact obviated by more and better observations with better instruments, and those improvements also show there's no good evidence that Arp's ideas about intrinsic redshift have any merit. Most of what you find at thunderbolts.info is based on obsolete data and misunderstandings of basic physics.

Your own professional association the IEEE laughs at your antique ideas about physics. You would burn Arps at the stake wouldn't you.