Brazilians Scientists Investigate Oldest Stars in the Milky Way
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reader!
It
follows an article published today (17/15) in the english website of the Agência
FAPESP noting that Brazilians Scientists investigate oldest stars in the Milky
Way.
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Falcão
NEWS
Scientists Investigate Oldest
Stars in the Milky Way
By José Tadeu Arantes
June 17, 2015
(Image: NASA)
Agência FAPESP – The first structure to form in a spiral galaxy
is a bulge, according to most models as well as to evidence provided by recent
observations, so it must be at least as old as the halo that surrounds it. The
bulge in our own galaxy, the Milky Way, contains its oldest stars, which are
more than 13 billion years old.
These very old stars are considered second-generation
stars, as first-generation stars must have disappeared a long time ago,
exploding and enriching the universe with chemical elements synthesized inside
them. There is great interest in studying second-generation stars because they
are remnants of the universe’s infancy.
This research is one of the objectives of the Thematic
Project entitled “Chemical evolution and galactic and extragalactic stellar
populations, by means of spectroscopy and imaging,” led by Beatriz Barbuy, Full
Professor at the University of São Paulo’s Institute of Astronomy, Geophysics
& Atmospheric Sciences (IAG-USP) in Brazil. Begun in 2011 and scheduled for
completion this year, the project is supported by FAPESP.
“First-generation stars are believed to have been very
massive, with relatively short lives, rapidly exploding and ejecting chemical
elements. The stars that formed after that, which had normal masses, must have
absorbed these chemical elements from the first generation. The metal-poor
second-generation stars are our principal object of study,” Barbuy told Agência FAPESP.
Because the bulge is assumed to be the oldest
structure in a galaxy, the search for old stars focuses on this region, but
second-generation objects are also sought in the halo, which contains stars
that are very poor in metals. Silvia Cristina Fernandes Rossi, a researcher
affiliated with IAG-USP and also a member of the Thematic Project group, has systematically studied these halo stars.
As a rule of thumb, metallicity can be considered a
marker of a star’s longevity. The fact that a star is metal-rich indicates that
it incorporated materials synthesized by the previous generation.
“But this isn’t a mechanistic rule because the high
concentration of stars in the galactic bulge makes enrichment with chemical
elements occur much faster there than in the halo,” Barbuy said.
The Milky Way’s bulge is indeed extremely dense. This
spheroidal region has a radius of only 10,000 light-years, but it contains some
1010 solar
masses, whereas the Milky Way’s total mass, estimated at 5.8×1011 solar
masses, is spread across an enormous disk with a diameter of some 100,000
light-years.
“Stars form ten times faster in the bulge than in the
vicinity of the Sun, so the interstellar medium is enriched very quickly and
there are few metal-poor stars in the region,” Barbuy said.
“In partnership with Cristina Chiappini, currently at
the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam in Germany, and other
researchers, we’re developing a chemical evolution model to show that rapid
enrichment led to a very old bulge population with high metallicity. The stars
in this population may be the oldest in the Galaxy.”
“In 2011,” she added, “we published an article in Nature sustaining
the hypothesis that these old stars were enriched by fast-rotating massive
stars, which we called ‘spinstars.’ And recently, with Cesar Henrique Siqueira Mello Junior, we
obtained confirmation of this hypothesis.”
Hypernovae
Spinstars are thought to have formed shortly after the
Big Bang, so they are approximately 13.7 billion years old. A spinstar has a
mass eight or more times that of the Sun, and it spins around its own axis at a
surface speed of 1.8 million kilometers per hour (kph), or 250 times that of
the Sun, which is 7,200 kph.
Spinstars are thought to have lasted only 30 million
years, a very short life span on the stellar timescale. When they finally
exploded, they ejected heavy materials into the interstellar medium, increasing
its metallicity.
“Other evidence obtained by myself, Amâncio Friaça and
Carlos Roberto da Silveira points to the possibility that bulge stars may have
been enriched by hypernovae, stars that explode with ten times more energy than
supernovae. According to Japanese researcher Kenichi Nomoto and collaborators,
the hypernova’s very high explosive energy derives from the fact that it has a
fast-rotating dark hole at its center,” Barbuy said.
Spinstar and hypernova may merely be different names
for the same object, although this has yet to be verified. Friaça, Silveira and
Barbuy used Nomoto’s model to explain the zinc-iron ratios of 56 stars in the
galactic bulge. A report of their study has been submitted for publication in
the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.
Source: English WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
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