Discovery of Remnants from Universe's First Supernovae in Distant Gas Clouds

TL;DR Summary
Astronomers have found evidence of the first stars in the universe by identifying the chemical traces of their explosions in distant gas clouds. These stars were made of just hydrogen and helium and were hundreds of times bigger than the Sun. The team used the Very Large Telescope to find three clouds that existed when the universe was just 10 to 15 percent of its current age and were not contaminated. The clouds were illuminated by the light of even more distant quasars, allowing the researchers to work out their chemical composition.
- Remains Of The First-Ever Supernovae In The Universe Finally Spotted IFLScience
- Astronomers find distant gas clouds with leftovers of the first stars Phys.org
- Ancient Gas Clouds Spotted by Astronomers May Be Remnants of First Stars Gizmodo
- Remnants of the universe's first stars may have been found New Scientist
- Guts of the universe's 1st stars found in distant gas clouds Space.com
- View Full Coverage on Google News
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
1
Time Saved
2 min
vs 3 min read
Condensed
81%
492 → 92 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on IFLScience