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Space Friday, January 11th 2013 at 2:45 pm

Neighboring Star is the Oldest Known and the Silver Fox of the Universe

Some of the oldest celestial bodies in our known universe are stars. And we don’t mean that name-forgetting and license-revoking kind of old, we’re talking about way before the first single-cell organism decided to start splitting in that puddle of primordial ooze. But for all our technological advancements in the field of astronomy, it can be difficult at times to accurately pinpoint the exact age of a particular star, since such efforts can take exhaustive years of constant analysis. Over an eight year period between 2003 to 2011 utilizing the Hubble Space Telescope’s Fine Guidance Sensors, astronomers have concluded that the star designated HD 140283 is the oldest known star out in space — and even more surprising is the fact that neighbors our very solar system.

Pennsylvania State University astronomer Howard Bond made this announcement yesterday in Long Beach, California at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society. He stated that HD 140283 is approximately 190 light years away from our solar system, a practical stone’s throw away when one considers the distance of other stars in relation to our proximity. As for the age of the star itself, Bond and his team were able to determine that HD 140283 is at least 13.2 billion years old, which reconciles with the estimated age of the universe — 13.77 billion years — and the Big Bang.

Astronomers were able to arrive at this approximation of HD 140283′s age by monitoring, aside from distance, its luminosity. They discovered that the star is exhausting the hydrogen at its core and gradually dimming over time. In other words, the resultant brightness acted as an indicator of just how old it is.

University of Texas astronomer Volker Bromm provided his own insight on the findings and proposed that based on HD 140283′s elemental composition — of which contains trace amounts of elements that weigh heavier than helium — the star was a part of the second stellar generation formed before the first coalesced shortly after the Big Bang.

Now that all the tumultuous years of the universe’s prehistory are over, HD 140283 can finally settle down and enjoy his retirement playing bocce ball with the other aged stars for the next million years or so — and if you’ve ever watched a bunch of old people play a round bocce ball, then you already know it practically takes an eternity to finish.

(via Nature, image courtesy of Nature)

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  • Anonymous

    The Bible clearly states that “God” created all the stars at one time. Take that, science!

  • Idlethoughts

    Come on man, Religion vs. Science flame wars are just as annoying regardless of who starts them. In fact it actually a little bit more annoying that you were starting it because your the one who brought up the other side for literally no other reason than to get in an argument with them. In short I’m asking you to go back under your bridge.

  • Anonymous

    No sooner did I turn on NPR this morning than it was reported that religious fanatics are trying to take over the country of Mali. If I recall correctly (and I don’t need to recall…let me go to another screen and check Amazon. I’ll be right back) Yep, I was right. The subtitle of Christopher Hitchens’s “God is Not Great” is “How Religion Poisons Everything”. So it’s not just some benign delusion like Santa Claus. People kill each other because of it.

  • Idlethoughts

    “So let attack and get into flame wars with the moderate ones online who neither harm people or are directly affiliated with the particular groups which do. Because surely getting them mad and convincing them that all nonreligious are assholes will cause unrelated people to get along better.” I’m sorry you seem to have left off the explanation for your actions, so I did my best to try and fill it in for you.

  • Anonymous

    Everything that makes us here on earth, had to have come from a star that lived it’s life converting hydrogen to heaver elements and than exploding after it ran out of hydrogen and sending all those elements out into space to regroup into new star systems like ours with more exotic elements. I’ve never heard any explanation exactly how that worked in the time frame of the universe. If this star is nearly as old as the universe, how was there time to create our solar system from a universe that started as nothing but hydrogen? The information is probably out there, anyone know where?

  • JK

    Meh, who needs to be religious to want to slap someone for this sort of attitude, after all, its is no better than crazy religious people hassling you and I get enough of that real life without the “religion is evil” showing up as well outside of reddit

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1076888764 A.L. Hern

    Dreadful writing, absolutely dreadful…

  • http://www.facebook.com/dan.ibekwe.7 Dan Ibekwe

    A bit information-light; I’d like to know the star’s mass relative to Sol, if it has a Hertzprung-Russell classification, surface temperature, yada yada. No planets, presumably, since there were (very very nearly) no metals or silicate minerals to make them out of back then.

  • http://www.facebook.com/dan.ibekwe.7 Dan Ibekwe

    Hydrogen and helium (in a roughly 73-27% ratio, IIRC) were created in the seconds following the Big Bang itself. Basically the whole universe passed briefly through a stage when it was at a similar temperature and pressure to the inside of a star. Some of the protons were fused together to create deuterium (quite abundant), tritium (radioactive, so now much rarer) and stable helium.
    The universe continued to expand and cool, and the fusion process rapidly ceased. Eventually the protons and other ionised particles paired up with free electrons (so the protons became hydrogen atoms, et.c.).