Three of the Oldest Stars in the Universe Found Circling the Milky Way

Mention the Milky Way and most people will visualise a great big spiral galaxy billions of years old. It’s thought to be a galaxy that took shape billions of years after the Big Bang. Studies by astronomers have revealed that there are the echo’s of an earlier time around us. A team of astronomers from MIT have found three ancient stars orbiting the Milky Way’s halo. The team think these stars formed when the Universe was around a billion years old and that they were once part of a smaller galaxy that was consumed by the Milky Way.

The team decided to analyse the orbital characteristics of the stars to see how they moved. The stars were all in different locations through the Milky Way’s halo and all thought to be about 30,000 light years from Earth. Comparing the motion with data from the Gaia astrometric satellite they discovered the stars were going in the opposite direction to the majority of other stars in the Milky Way. We call this retrograde motion and it suggests the stars came from somewhere else, not having formed with the Milky Way. The chemical signatures of the stars coupled with their motion give strong credibility to the liklihood these ancient stars are not native to the Milk Way.

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