Hunting The First Generations Of Stars And Galaxies (speaker: Anna Frebel, MKI)

Tuesday April 8, 2014 4:00 pm
Marlar Lounge (37-252)

Abstract
The new Australian SkyMapper 1.3m telescope is carrying out a photometric survey of the entire Southern Sky. From using ugriz filter plus an additionally narrow filter placed at the Ca K line at 3933A, stellar parameters can be obtained for all stars observed. This allows for an efficient selection of a variety of stellar types, including metal-poor stars. Recent efforts to search for the most metal-poor stars have indeed delivered a new record holder for the most iron-poor star: no iron lines were detected in the high-resolution follow-up Magellan spectrum and only an upper limit of [Fe/H]<-7.1 could be determined. Contrary to its iron deficiency, the star has a significant amount of carbon. This abundance pattern can be explained with the star being a second-generation star in the universe which formed from a gas cloud enriched by only one PopIII first star.  What was the environment in which these early stellar generations formed? A spectroscopic study of the faintest dwarf galaxy Segue 1 has shed light on this question. Given the chemical abundance patterns of some of its only few stars) with metallicities ranging from -4 < [Fe/H] <-1) suggest that this tiny galaxy may be a surviving first galaxy from the early universe. This suggestion is in line with recent age measurements for similar ultra-faint dwarf which showed these galaxies to be single-age stellar systems that are about as old as the universe itself. Please note:  This talk replaces the colloquium originally scheduled for April 8.  We hope to reschedule Beth Willman (Haverford College) for a future date.

 

Sponsored by the Astrophysics Division of the MIT Department of Physics and the MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research