Science
Group of ancient stars spotted near the sun could rewrite the Milky Way's history
Ancient stars located surprisingly near to our sun formed less than a billion years after the Big Bang — suggesting part of the Milky Way is much older than previously thought, a study has found.
Most stars, including the sun, are located in a thin disk rotating around the center of the galaxy. Researchers thought this disk formed around 8 to 10 billion years ago, but with the help of machine learning, they've found some of its stars are more than 13 billion years old.
Researchers dated these ancient stars by studying data collected by the European Space Agency's Gaia spacecraft and posted their findings to the pre-print arXiv server earlier this year. The Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP) in Germany announced the discovery on Wednesday, July 31.
The universe is around 13.8 billion years old, so the presence of 13 billion-year-old stars in our galaxy's thin disk means that the disk must have formed in the first billion years following the birth of the universe — pushing back our galaxy's star formation timeline in a huge way.
"These ancient stars in the disc suggest that the formation of the Milky Way's thin disc began much earlier than previously believed, by about 4-5 billion years," study lead author Samir Nepal, a doctoral candidate studying the Milky Way at AIP, said in a statement.
Related: Runaway 'failed star' races through the cosmos at 1.2 million mph
Scientists are piecing together the history of the Milky Way with Gaia data to create maps that document the age, chemical composition and movement of its stars, according to the statement. The Milky Way contains more than 100 billion stars, so there's a lot to map.
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