Information from the European
Southern Observatory
ESO Press Release
02/01
7 February
2001
Embargoed until 7 February 2001 at 20:00
hrs CET (19:00 UT) |
|
How Old is the
Universe?
First Reading of a Basic
Cosmic Chronometer with UVES and the VLT
Summary
Most astronomers would
agree that the age of the Universe - the
time elapsed since the "Big Bang" - is one of
the "holy grails of cosmology".
Despite great efforts during recent years,
the various estimates of this basic number have
resulted in rather diverse values. When derived
from current cosmological models, it depends on
a number of theoretical assumptions that are not
very well constrained by the incomplete
available observational data. At present, a
value in the range of 10-16 billion years [1]
is considered most likely.
But now, an international team of astronomers
[2]
has used the powerful ESO Very Large
Telescope (VLT) and its very efficient
spectrograph UVES
to perform a unique measurement that paves the
way for a new and more accurate determination of
the age of the Universe. They measured for the
first time the amount of the
radioactive isotope Uranium-238 in a star that
was born when the Milky Way, the galaxy in which
we live, was still forming. It is the first
measurement ever of uranium outside the Solar
System .
This method works in a way similar to the
well-known Carbon-14 dating in archaeology, but
over much longer times. Ever since the star was
born, the Uranium "clock" has
ticked away over the eons, unaffected by the
turbulent history of the Milky Way. It now reads
12.5 billion years . Since
the star obviously cannot be older than the
Universe, it means that the
Universe must be older than that .
Although the stated uncertainty is still
about 25% or about ±3 billion years, this is
only to a minor extent due to the astronomical
observation. The main problem is the current
absence of accurate knowledge of some of the
basic atomic and nuclear properties of the
elements involved. However, further laboratory
work will greatly improve this situation and a more accurate value for the age of
the star and implicitly, for the Universe,
should therefore be forthcoming before long
.
This important result is reported in the
international research journal Nature in
the issue of February 8, 2001.
PR
Photo 05a/01 : The
12.5-billion-year old star CS 31082-001.
PR
Photo 05b/01 : The telltale
spectral line in CS 31082-001 - the first
detection of uranium outside the Solar
System .
|
Heavy elements in stars
While hydrogen, helium and lithium were
produced during the Big Bang, all heavier elements
result from nuclear reactions in the interiors of
stars. When stars die, heavy-element enriched
matter is dispersed into surrounding space and
will later be incorporated in the next generations
of stars. In fact, the gold in the ring on your
finger was produced in an exploding star and
deposited in the interstellar cloud from which the
Sun and its planets were later formed.
Thus, the older a star is, the lower is
generally its content of heavy elements like iron
and other metals. Measurements have shown that old
stars that are members of large agglomerations
known as globular clusters are normally
quite "metal-poor"- their metal-content ranges
down to about 1/200 of that of the Sun, in which
these metals constitute only 2% of the total mass,
the rest being still in the form of hydrogen and
helium.
Very old stars in the Milky
Way galaxy
After decades of mostly fruitless efforts, a
large spectral survey by American astronomer
Timothy C. Beers and his collaborators has
recently uncovered hundreds of stars with much
lower metal content than even the globular
clusters, in some cases only 1/10,000 of the solar
value. It is evident that these extremely
metal-poor stars must have formed during the very
infancy of the Milky Way, an important, but still
poorly understood phase in the life of our
galaxy.
These particular stars exhibit a great variety
of element abundances that may ultimately throw
more light on the processes at work during this
early period. As a step in this direction, an
international team of astronomers [2]
decided to study these stars in much more detail.
They were awarded observing time for a Large
Programme in 2000-2001 with the powerful
combination of the ESO VLT and its very efficient
high-dispersion spectrograph UVES. The first
observations have been carried out and, not
unexpectedly, have already proven to be a true
gold mine of new information.
Cosmochronology with
radioactive isotopes
It is possible to make a fundamental
determination of the age of a star that is quite
independent of stellar evolution models, provided
it contains a suitable long-lived radioactive
isotope [3].
The use of a "radioactive chronometer" depends on
the measurement of the abundance of the
radioactive isotope, as compared to a stable
one.
This technique is analogous to the Carbon-14
dating method that has been so successful in
archaeology over time spans of up to a few tens of
thousands of years. In astronomy, however, this
technique must obviously be applied to vastly
longer time scales.
For the method to work well, the right choice
of radioactive isotope is very critical. Contrary
to stable elements that formed at the same time,
the abundance of a radioactive (unstable) isotope
decreases all the time. The faster the decay, the
less there will be left of the radioactive isotope
after a certain time, the greater will be the
abundance difference when compared to a stable
isotope, and the more accurate is the resulting
age.
Yet, for the clock to remain useful, the
radioactive element must not decay too fast -
there must still be enough left of it to allow an
accurate measurement, even after several billion
years.
Thorium and Uranium
clocks
This leaves only two possible isotopes for
astronomical measurements, thorium
(232Th or Thorium-232, with a half-life
of 14.05 billion years [4])
and uranium (238U or Uranium-238,
half-life 4.47 billion years).
Several age determinations have been made by
means of the Thorium-232 isotope. Its strongest
spectral line is measurable with current
telescopes in a handful of comparatively bright
stars, including the Sun. However, the decay is
really too slow to provide sufficiently accurate
time measurements. It takes around 47 billion
years for this isotope to decay by a factor of 10,
and with a typical measuring uncertainty of 25%,
the resulting age uncertainty is about 4-5 billion
years, or approx. one third of the age of the
Universe. This slow-moving clock runs forever, but
is hard to read accurately!
The faster decay of Uranium-238 would make it a
much more precise cosmic clock. However, because
uranium is the rarest of all normal elements, its
spectral lines in stars are always very weak; if
visible at all, they normally drown entirely in a
vast ocean of stronger spectral lines from more
abundant elements.
Nevertheless, this is exactly where the low
abundance of heavier elements in very old stars
comes to the rescue. In the stars that were
studied by the present team at the VLT, with
typically 1000 times less of the common elements
than in the Sun, the predominance of the maze of
atomic and molecular lines in the spectrum is
greatly reduced. The lines of rare elements like
uranium therefore stand a real chance of being
measurable. This is particularly so, if for some
reason uranium atoms were preferentially retained
in the debris of those early supernova explosions
that also created the iron-group elements we see
in the stars today.
The uranium line in CS
31082-001
ESO PR Photo
05a/01
[Preview
- JPEG: 337 x 400 pix - 32k]
[Normal
- JPEG: 674 x 800 pix - 120k]
|
Caption : PR Photo 05a/01 displays the
Milky Way star field around CS
31082-001 , the 12th-magnitude star at the
centre. The "cross" is caused by reflections in
the telescope optics, a typical effect for
relatively bright stars. Technical
information about this photo is available
below. |
|
|
ESO PR Photo
05b/01
[Preview
- JPEG: 501 x 400 pix - 42k]
[Normal
- JPEG: 1001 x 800 pix - 128k]
[Full-Res
- JPEG: 1502 x 1200 pix - 200k]
|
Caption : PR Photo 05b/01 The observed
spectrum (dots) of the old star CS 31082-001 in the region of
the uranium (U II) line at 385.96 nm. The origin
of some of the other spectral lines in the
region is also indicated (e.g. iron, neodymium).
The synthetic spectrum (thin line) was computed
for the adopted abundances of the stable
elements and for four different values of the
abundance (by number) of uranium atoms in the
atmosphere of the star. The uppermost line
(corresponding to no uranium at all) clearly
does not fit the observed spectrum at all. The
best fit is provided by the middle (red) line,
representing a uranium abundance of
approximately 6% of the solar value - see also
the text. Technical
information about this diagramme is
available below.
|
The excitement of the astronomers was great
when they inspected the first spectrum of the
12th-magnitude programme star CS
31082-001 ! It showed what is probably the
richest spectrum of rare, heavy elements ever
seen. In particular, the faint lines of these
elements were unusually free of interference from
the lines of the iron-group elements which are
indeed only 1/800 as abundant in this star as in
the Sun, and by molecular lines (of CH and CN),
often quite numerous even in such low-metallicity
stars.
While only one or at most two thorium lines
have ever been measured in any other stars, no
less than 14 thorium lines are seen in the
spectrum of CS 31082-001 .
Indeed, there is such a wealth of lines of other
rare and precious metals that this spectrum is a
real astronomers' treasure box. And best of all,
the long sought-after line of singly ionized
uranium is clearly detected at its rest wavelength
of 389.59 nm in the near-ultraviolet region of the
spectrum, cf. PR Photo 05b/01
!
Not surprisingly, the uranium line is still
quite weak. After all, uranium is the rarest of
elements to begin with and it has further decayed
by a factor of eight since this star was born.
Moreover, even in this low metal-abundance star,
the near-UV spectrum remains rather rich in other
lines.
The accurate measurement of this faint spectral
line therefore places extreme demands on the
acuity (resolving power) and efficiency of the
spectrograph and the light-gathering power of the
telescope. The VLT and UVES have been built as the
world-leading combination of these observational
assets, and the spectra obtained of this
comparatively faint star (magnitude 12, i.e. 500
times fainter than what can be seen with the
unaided eye) are absolutely superb - indeed of a
quality which until recently was reserved for
naked-eye stars only. Despite its faintness, the
uranium line can therefore be measured with very
good accuracy.
The age of CS 31082-001
A detailed analysis, using model atmospheres
and synthetic spectrum calculations, shows that
all the heaviest stable elements follow closely
the abundance pattern seen in the Sun, but at a
level of about 12% of the corresponding solar
abundances [5].
The measurements also show that the thorium and
uranium abundances are somewhat lower than this -
of the order of 9% and 6% of the solar values,
respectively. Since these two elements were formed
by the same atomic processes as their stable
neighbours in the periodic table, this means that
radioactive decay has progressed further in CS 31082-001 than in the Sun.
Different models of the element production in
supernova explosions predict somewhat different
production ratios between the stable and
radioactive isotopes, leading to age estimates for
this star in the range 11-16 billion years. The most likely age of CS 31082-001 is
12.5 billion years .
The Universe is older than the star, hence it
must be older than 12.5 billion years.
Improved age determination
soon possible
Given the faster decay rate of Uranium-238, the
measuring uncertainty for the stellar uranium line
corresponds to an age uncertainty of only ±1.5
Gyr. This can be further reduced with even better
spectra of CS 31082-001 and/or
with the discovery and observation of other
similar stars.
However, for the immediate future, the accuracy
of this age determination does not really depend
on the VLT spectrum. For the time being, the real
problems are the present uncertainties in the
available laboratory data for uranium by means of
which the measured line strengths are converted
into element abundances. In addition, the
nuclear-physics calculations of the initial
isotope production ratios introduce errors that
are larger than those of the spectral
observation.
Thus, improved measurements of those physical
data are necessary in order to read more
accurately the cosmic clock in CS
31082-001 from the existing observational
data. The relevant laboratory measurements are now
underway at the CEA, Saclay, France, and the
University of Lund, Sweden.
In the meantime, the team is trying to find
other stars like CS 31082-001 .
There may not be many, but if the uranium line can
be seen and measured in more spectra, it will also
become possible to judge whether those very old
stars, as surmised, are all of about the same age,
i.e. that of our Milky Way galaxy.
More information
The research described in this Press Release is
reported in a research article ("Measurement of
stellar age from uranium decay"), that appears in
the international research journal Nature on Thursday, February 8,
2001.
Notes
[1]: 1 billion = 1,000
million.
[2]: The team members are:
Roger Cayrel (P.I.), Francois Spite
and Monique Spite (all Observatoire de
Paris, France), Vanessa Hill and
Francesca Primas (ESO), Johannes
Andersen and Birgitta Nordström
(Copenhagen and Lund Observatories, Denmark and
Sweden), Timothy C. Beers (Michigan State
Univ., USA), Piercarlo Bonifacio and
Paolo Molaro (Trieste, Italy), Bertrand
Plez (Montpellier, France), and Beatriz
Barbuy (Univ. of Sao Paulo, Brazil).
[3]: Isotopes of a natural
element contain different numbers of neutrons in
the nuclei, in addition to a certain number of
protons that characterize that particular element.
Some isotopes are "radioactive", i.e. with time
they are transformed into other elements or
isotopes. Other isotopes are stable over
exceedingly long periods of time. Uranium-238
contains 92 protons and 146 neutrons.
[4]: The "half-life" of an
isotope indicates the time after which half the
atoms have decayed. After another time interval of
this length has passed, only 25% of the original
isotope is left, etc.
[5]: As the iron abundance in
CS 31082-001 is only 0.12%
(1/800) of that in the Sun, this means that,
relative to iron and similar, lighter elements,
the heaviest elements in that star are
approximately 100 times "overabundant". Their
spectral lines, again in relative terms, are
correspondingly stronger - this is of crucial
importance for the present, difficult
measurements.
PR Photo 05a/01 is
reproduced from the STScI Digitized Sky Survey (©
1993, 1994, AURA, Inc. - original plate material
by Royal Observatory Edinburgh and the
Anglo-Australian Observatory - All Rights
Reserved) and based on blue-sensitive photographic
data obtained using the UK Schmidt
Telescope at Siding Spring (Australia). The
comparatively empty sky field is located at high
southern (-76°) galactic latitude and measures 7 x
7 arcmin2 and . PR Photo
05b/01 is reproduced from a spectrum of CS 31082-001 , obtained in October
2000 with the UVES high-dispersion spectrograph at
the VLT 8.2-m KUEYEN telescope at Paranal. The
exposure lasted 4 hours, at a spectral resolution
of approx. 75,000 and with a S/N-ratio of about
300. The lines are identified and three synthetic
spectra, with different U-abundances, are drawn to
illustrate the fit.
Contacts
|
Roger Cayrel Observatoire de
Paris-Meudon France Tel: +33 - 1 - 4051 -
2251 email: roger.cayrel@obspm.fr
Johannes Andersen Copenhagen
University Observatory Denmark Tel.: +45 -
353 - 25934 email: ja@astro.ku.dk
|
Monique Spite Observatoire de
Paris-Meudon France Tel: +33 - 1 - 4507 -
7840 email: monique.spite@obspm.fr
Vanessa Hill
ESO-Garching Germany Tel: +49 - 89 -
3200 - 6465 email: vhill@eso.org
|
© ESO Education & Public Relations
Department Karl-Schwarzschild-Strasse 2,
D-85748 Garching, Germany
|