THE FIRST STARS
ABOUT
5 JANUARY; ABOUT 14,600 METERS UP THE LINE
Compared to our knowledge of
other periods in the Universe’s development, there is still relatively little
known about the cosmic dark ages, the period in our Universe’s history when no
visible light was detectable. After the Big Bang, the cosmic microwave
background radiation was for many centuries the only residue left from this
momentous event. And for millions of years the Universe was basically opaque.
But tremendous changes were about to occur, ones that would establish the
foundations of the physical Universe as we know it, and create the conditions
which were to prove indispensable to the formation of elements other than those
created by primordial nucleosynthesis.
Current thinking in cosmology
holds that after recombination, the dark ages began to wane, as we noted in the
previous chapter, after about 200 million years. This date, based on the most
recent data, surprised some observers, since it had been previously believed
that the first stars had not materialized until 400 million years after the Big
Bang. (Some now argue that stars before 100 million years after the Big Bang
are likely.1) Evidence has been discovered of the remnants of these
earliest of all stars. What do we know of the early Universe’s history?
Ionization and Reionization in the Early Universe
The period of recombination that
occurred in the early Universe cleared up the cloud of ionized gas that had
existed earlier and made the Universe’s hydrogen electrically neutral,
temporarily producing a transparent Universe, albeit one in which there were no
significant light sources. But this neutral hydrogen did absorb certain
wavelengths of light, and as it spread out during the Universe’s expansion, it
blocked much of the electromagnetic spectrum. This has made the study of the
very earliest light-producing bodies in the Universe problematic. But it was
some of these same early light sources, the very earliest stars, that probably
contributed to the Universe’s
reionization. The earliest stars may have been quite massive. According
to cosmologist Abraham Loeb of Harvard, the very powerful ultraviolet radiation
emissions from these ancient, enormous (and comparatively short-lived) stars
heated and ionized the areas of gas that surrounded them. The formation of the
first galaxies several hundred million years later seems to have contributed to
this process in an even more significant way. The ionization of hydrogen
radically altered its structure. As Loeb has summarized reionization,
Observations of the spectra of early galaxies, quasars, and gamma ray
bursts indicate that less than a billion years [after recombination] later the same [hydrogen] gas underwent a wrenching transition from
atoms back to their constituent protons and electrons…Indeed, the bulk of the
Universe’s ordinary matter today is in the form of free electrons and protons,
located deep in intergalactic space.2
So the reionization process seems
to have been completed by around 1 billion years after the Big Bang. By this
time the expansion of the Universe was such that the fundamental particles that
had formerly been the constituents of hydrogen were not densely enough concentrated
in most regions to block our view of the early Universe’s structures. What is
called the intergalactic medium, or IGM, was now much more spread out than it
was in the period before recombination. The Universe was again transparent.3
So how did the stars which were
part of this process begin to form, the stars which would eventually become
part of galactic structures of immense size?
The Formation of Stars
There are aspects of star
formation that are poorly understood. But in general, star creation begins when
energy-matter begins to aggregate in particular regions of space-time marked by
energy fluctuations and gravitational instability. Most stars begin their lives
as diffuse balls of hydrogen, what are known as protostars. Gravitation causes this aggregation of hydrogen gas to
contract, along with dusty material. (Dust-like material was, however, probably
absent when the first stars were forming.) The gravity must be strong enough to
overcome the resistance of magnetic fields, and the turbulence of the gas and
dust themselves. Dark matter appears to be a factor in the condensation of this
material, but recent research has shown
that it may not play a critical role.4 As the cloud of dust and gas
contracts, it appears that part of this mass collapses faster than it can cool
down, forming what is called a minimum fragment mass. This minimum mass is
thought to typically be one one-hundredth of a solar mass [our Sun=1 solar
mass] in size. During contraction the mass of material out of which the star
will be formed assumes a disk-like shape. It also begins to spin rapidly as it
contracts. As energy is expended in this process, spin (angular momentum)
slows. The central part of the disk gathers material while the outer part of
the disk often produces planets through the accretion of solid materials. As it
loses angular momentum, the mass of material at the center of the disk
gradually begins to form into a sphere. Because of immense pressure at its
core, the center of the emerging star rises in temperature, and upon hitting 10
million degrees Kelvin, or about 18 million degrees Fahrenheit, the fusion
process of hydrogen to helium begins.5 The length of a star’s life
will be determined by how much mass it has to begin with. The majority of stars
in our galaxy are called main sequence
stars. They are neither immense in size (by stellar standards), and hence
prone to instability, nor are they so small that their centers never ignite.
They are relatively stable and they can burn for a very long time. Our Sun, as
we will see shortly, is a notable example of such a star.
The Life Cycle of a Star
After protostars form from
nebulae of dust and gases, if they are main sequence stars, they settle into
the billions of years of their “life span”. The vast majority of the stars we
see, about 90%, are using hydrogen as their chief fuel. Hydrogen burning
releases about ten times as much energy per gram as helium burning.6
A star exists in a constant state of “conflict”, so to speak. Astrophysicist
David Arnett puts it this way:
Stars last so long because of a delicate state of balance. The crush of
gravity which pulls them in upon themselves is balanced by the increasingly
high pressures in their interiors. Their prodigious radiation of energy, as
light and neutrinos, is balanced by a prodigious generation of energy, by
nuclear burning and gravitational contraction.7
Stars are therefore immense
nuclear furnaces in which gravity and pressure are waging constant war. Stars
on the main sequence can be engaged in this struggle for more than
10,000,000,000 years. It is not yet known what fraction of stars have planetary
systems, but apparently a significant number of them do in light of the
discovery of various exoplanets
(worlds orbiting stars other than our Sun).
The ultimate fate of a star
depends on its mass. Main sequence stars will, when they exhaust their fuel,
enter into a red giant phase. A red
giant looks red because of its lower temperature, and the exhaustion and
collapse of its center are accompanied by a vast expansion of its outer layers.
A low mass star (like our Sun) will go through a red giant phase and then
collapse, first into a white dwarf, and then ultimately to a black dwarf once
it has cooled off completely. If a star is very large compared to our Sun
(anywhere from about five solar masses on upward), it will have sufficient mass
to not only become a red giant when it has burned through all its fuel, but to
go supernova when its nuclear fuel is
exhausted. In a supernova event, the star’s core goes through a catastrophic
implosion, driving its heat up once more and unleashing an enormous wave of
neutrinos. This shock wave of neutrinos will blast through the star’s outer
layers, triggering an explosion of unimaginable violence.8 If what
remains after the supernova event is 1.4 to about 3 times as massive as our
Sun, it will become a neutron star.9
Neutron stars are the densest objects we know of, and even the smallest
amounts of matter have enormous weight in them. If a star is of very high mass
its remainder will, after its supernova event, collapse into a black hole,
where the intense gravitational field created will even preclude the emission
of light.
Types of Star Populations, Star Abundances
The earliest stars are known as Population III stars. They are usually
thought to have been massively huge and of relatively short duration, although
recent research indicates that the first generation of them may not have been
as massive as previously believed, and that many of them were part of binary
star systems. Subsequent generations of Population III stars are still
considered primordial, however, and the second generation of Population III
stars was probably much more numerous. There are thought to be no Population
III stars remaining.10 Astrophysicists and astronomers call such
early stars metal-poor or of low metallicity,
metal in this context meaning any element heavier than hydrogen or helium. But many researchers are convinced that
because of the large masses of many of the earliest stars (perhaps of the
second generation) there were numerous supernova events among them. Population II stars are the oldest
observable stars and generally have greater metallicity than Population III
stars could have had, since they are so often formed out of
the remnants of the oldest stars. In our galaxy Population II stars make up the
great bulk of the galactic center. The stars with the greatest metallicity are
the Population I stars, the newest
ones, a group which includes our Sun.
Estimating the number of stars has always
been problematic. In 2005 astrophysicist Alan Heavens estimated that over the
course of the Universe’s 13.7 billion year existence 9 x 1021—9
sextillion—stars have been formed. (To put this number into perspective, the
number of seconds that have passed since the Big Bang is approximately 4.32 x
1017. This means that the number of stars that have existed,
according to this estimate, is more than 20,000 times larger.)11 But
in 2010 a new estimate was made, based on a reassessment of the number of dwarf
stars in elliptical galaxies (see next chapter). The new estimate is even more
overwhelming: from 100 sextillion to perhaps 300 sextillion stars are thought to exist. Undoubtedly, these
estimates will vary in the years to come.12
So why do stars have any degree
of metallicity at all, and why do Population I stars have the greatest amounts
of it? The answer is to be found in the processes by which the elements beyond
hydrogen and helium were created.
Stellar Nucleosynthesis
All elements are the descendants
of the nuclei that formed after the first three minutes of the Universe’s
existence had gone by. All of the elements (with some rare exceptions; see
below) were created either in the primordial nucleosynthesis that followed the
Big Bang or in the processes of stellar nucleosynthesis and the phenomena
associated with them. The elements that make up the bulk of the visible matter in the Universe are of primordial
origin. But the largest number of
different elements are of stellar/supernova origin.
At first, the problem of how
stellar nucleosynthesis occurred was a daunting one, inasmuch as the
temperatures by which hydrogen and helium could be converted into the heavier
elements seemed unlikely to occur naturally. The first serious breakthrough in
this research came in 1953 through the work of the astronomer Fred Hoyle and a
team led by physicist Willy Fowler. These scientists demonstrated the
theoretical means by which helium could be converted first to beryllium and
then to carbon, the basis of living things. Further, their research indicated
that when most stars die, they go through a long process of alternating
implosion and stabilization which creates, over time, a wide variety of
temperatures and pressures within them. A single star can be the birthplace of
numerous elements during this very long process.13 Temperatures in
this process can rise to phenomenal levels. The conversion of helium into
carbon requires interior temperatures of more than 100 million degrees K, which
are produced in the bigger red giants.14 The result of the process
of alternating implosion and stabilization is that a red giant is structured in
layers. The outer layer of a truly huge red giant consists of hydrogen and
helium. Other layers contain successively heavier elements, such as carbon and
nitrogen, then layers that contain heavier elements still, such as sodium and
potassium. And at the core can be found heavy elements such as iron.15
In a landmark 1957 paper, Fowler,
Hoyle, and two other scientists, E. Margaret Burbidge and G. R. Burbidge laid
out the basic processes of nucleosynthesis in such a convincing manner that
their work is still a major source of our knowledge. B2FH, as they
are often referred to, established the following:
- Elements
can be transmuted, i.e., converted to other elements.
-The
abundance distribution of elements gives us important clues as to their origins.
-All
elements evolved from hydrogen, the most abundant element in the Universe
-The
hypothesis that stars are the birthplace of most elements has the greatest observational
support.
-As
each nuclear fuel within a star is exhausted, the temperature of the star
rises.
-It
is this succession of higher temperatures at different stages in a star’s life
that gives rise to heavier and more
stable elements.
-Nuclear
evolution is most advanced at the center of a star.
-Stars
of different ages have different chemical compositions.
-Stellar
material is spread by explosions, supernova explosions being the most efficient means by which stars scatter
material.
-There is a wide variety of different processes by which stars
create particular elements, and
these processes occur over widely varying timeframes.16
The findings and hypotheses
discussed in the B2FH paper have held up well over the years,
although major research continues on stellar nucleosynthesis, and many of the
observations the authors made have been explored in much greater detail. But
the major points remain: the heavier elements are created in massive stars or
in the supernova explosions that follow the implosions of those stars’
interiors. These elements are distributed by these same explosions.
Of all the stellar processes, the
supernovae appear to be of the greatest significance in nucleosynthesis. The
enormous amounts of matter that are emitted in supernova implosion/explosions
spread elements that were contained in the exploded stars throughout the
surrounding space, although elements at the very core of such stars are often
captured in black holes. Since the Earth itself contains so much iron, almost
35% of its mass, the synthesis of this element was particularly significant to
us. Recent research indicates that iron
was first synthesized early in the history of the galaxy. The synthesis took
place in the aftermath of the explosions of super-massive Population III stars,
explosions which seem to have been of an extremely violent nature.17
Iron was also synthesized at the core of Population II and Population I stars
that reached red giant status, and it is the last fuel at the core of the star
that the star attempts to burn, without success. This is a sign that the red
giant, if of sufficient mass (one much larger than our Sun), is nearing
supernova status.
It is these implosions/explosions
of massive red giants, called by astronomers Type II supernovae, that
synthesize all the heaviest elements in the periodic table. The tremendous
shock waves created by Type II supernova events blast any atoms within their
range with huge numbers of neutrons contained within the supernova. The nuclei
so affected can form all the heavy
elements right up through uranium by “fattening up” on such masses of neutrons.
When nuclei absorb too many neutrons, a neutron is converted into a proton
through the process of negative beta decay (in other words, when an electron is
emitted from an atom and a neutron undergoes a change), thus changing the atom
from one type of element to another. The heaviest elements are neutron-rich,
with very high isotopic numbers, such as 238uranium. Astronomers
call this the r process, and among
its products are gold, platinum, and all the highly radioactive elements.18
Type II supernovae tend to be found in spiral galaxies—like ours.19
Stellar winds can also spread
star material outward, but such processes appear to be less efficient than the
scattering produced by supernovae. Stellar winds are hot, ionized particles of
dust and gas driven from the surface of stars by the pressure of the radiation
that accumulates in their outer layers. They are a common feature of red
giants. The material blasted out in these winds can be very important in the
formation of new stars and planets.20
There are a handful of exceptions
to the usual processes. As two cosmologists have put it,
The stars are the source of all the heavier elements of the periodic
table, from carbon on up. The common isotopes of the elements between helium
and carbon (beryllium, lithium, and boron) cannot be generated by ordinary
stellar nucleosynthesis but are produced mainly by reactions involving cosmic rays.
Cosmic rays are high-energy, relativistic particles, mostly protons, which are
ejected from pulsars, supernovae, and other energetic sources. When these
particles traverse interstellar gas, some collisions with the gas particles are
inevitable. If the cloud has been enriched with carbon and oxygen by earlier
generations of stars, a proton will occasionally strike a nucleus of one of
these atoms; with so much energy, the proton literally knocks the nucleus
apart, creating the light elements. The rarity of these formation processes
accounts for the scarcity of these isotopes; they are by far the least
abundant.21
Therefore, the elements out of
which humans are comprised have in fact existed from the time of the Earth’s
origins. The hydrogen in their bodies was made less than 400,000 years after
the Big Bang. The other elements that make up humans are the products of solar
furnaces and inconceivably violent explosions, which broke down and rearranged
the elegantly simple hydrogen and helium atoms and produced an entire menagerie
of unexpected specimens. Since the Sun is the source of all the elements out of
which we are composed (probably bequeathed to it by supernovae) then it must be
said that nothing out of which a human being is composed is less than 4.6
billion years old.
Some people scoff at the phrase,
“Humans are made out of star stuff”, but it is, in fact, simply the bare
expression of the truth. The formation of elements heavier than hydrogen,
helium, and lithium took the rise of life in the cosmos from a remote
possibility to a distinct one. Much of what we are made of indeed originated in
the stars. If stars had not come into existence, human life wouldn’t have
either. So when we are looking for our ultimate origins, we need do nothing
more than venture outside on a clear, moonless night—and look up.
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