Hubble telescope spots Earendel, the most distant star on record
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[April 01, 2022]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Using NASA's Hubble
Space Telescope, scientists have discovered the most distant individual
star on record, a bright behemoth they nicknamed Earendel - Old English
for "morning star" - because it existed during the dawn of the universe.
Researchers said the star, very hot and blue in color, was estimated at
50 to 100 times the mass of our sun, while being millions of times
brighter. Its light traveled for 12.9 billion years before reaching
Earth, meaning that the star existed when the universe was just 7
percent of its current age.
Earendel was born roughly 900 million years after the Big Bang event at
the outset of the universe. It belonged to among the earliest
generations of stars at a time when the universe was quite different
than it is today.
"This really opens up a new window into those early days of the
universe," said astronomer Brian Welch of Johns Hopkins University in
Baltimore, lead author of the research published this week in the
journal Nature.
"We're seeing the star in the time period that is often referred to as
Cosmic Dawn - when the first light in the universe was starting to turn
on with these first stars and when the first galaxies are starting to
form," Welch added.
Explaining its nickname, Welch said the researchers figured that the
"morning star" existing during the Cosmic Dawn period was "a good
parallel."
"It's also for the 'Lord of the Rings' nerds out there," he added,
noting that Earendel is the same Old English word that author J.R.R.
Tolkien used for inspiration for a character from his work "The
Silmarillion" that becomes a star.
In observing objects as distant as Earendel, scientists are peering into
the deep past because of the vast distance the light from the star
traveled to reach Earth - in a sense, using Hubble as a time machine.
"So normally when we look at very distant objects, what we're seeing is
the light from an entire galaxy - so millions of stars all blended
together - and we've been able to see those out to even farther
distances. But in this case, thanks to a very massive cluster of
galaxies in the foreground, the light from this one star has just been
very, very highly magnified, so we're able to see this single star at a
much greater distance," Welch said.
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Using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, scientists have discovered the
most distant individual star on record, a bright behemoth they
nicknamed Earendel - Old English for "morning star" - because it
existed during the dawn of the universe. This report produced by
Freddie Joyner.
The first Hubble images of Earendel
were obtained in 2016, with 2019 follow-up observations. The
researchers are hoping to study it further using the next-generation
James Webb Space Telescope, due to become operational within months
after being launched in December.
Welch said the researchers were surprised by the discovery, saying,
"Yeah, there was definitely a period of wondering whether this could
possibly be real."
Until now, the most distant single star on record was one nicknamed
Icarus that existed 4 billion years after Earendel.
Earendel was probably much different than stars populating the
universe today. Welch said it was likely composed mostly of hydrogen
and helium, with perhaps trace amounts of heavier elements including
carbon, nitrogen and oxygen.
Welch said the first stars formed roughly 100 million years after
the Big Bang explosion and that perhaps one or two generations of
stars had preceded Earendel's formation.
Heavier elements did not exist until they were forged in the fusion
caldrons of the cores of the initial generations of stars, then were
blasted into space when these earliest stars exploded at the end of
their life cycles.
Even though scientists on Earth can now see its light, Earendel
itself certainly no longer exists, with such huge stars having
relatively short lifespans, Welch said. It existed for perhaps a few
hundred million years before dying in a supernova explosion.
"Massive stars tend to live fast and die young," Welch said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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