Universe's first star born tiny and grew huge
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The first object to brighten the dark, primordial universe after the Big Bang was the tiny seed of a star that rapidly grew into a behemoth 100 times more massive than the sun, scientists said on Thursday.
This first generation of stars apparently lived hard and died quickly. While our sun may live 5 billion years, this first generation of stars likely lasted only a slim fraction of that -- about 1 million years, the researchers said.
Scientists think the universe was born in a Big Bang explosion 13.7 billion years ago and has been expanding ever since. But they have struggled to understand how the first stars formed in the aftermath of this cataclysm.
Japanese and U.S. astronomers ran a sophisticated computer simulation that showed how some of the hydrogen and helium gases strewn throughout the young universe came together to form the first generation of stars.
"These stars are thought to be the first sources of light and also the first sources of heavy elements such as carbon, oxygen and iron," Naoki Yoshida of Nagoya University in Japan, who worked on the study published in the journal Science, said in a telephone briefing.
"If we want to understand how things came about and look the way they do now, we have to go back in time and understand how stars looked when they first began to form," added Lars Hernquist of Harvard University in Massachusetts.
COMPACT UNIVERSE
At the time, the universe was about 20 times as compact as it is now, Hernquist said. "We think that early in the universe, the only elements that existed were hydrogen and helium, with trace amounts of lithium," Hernquist added. Continued...
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