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The birth of the Universe has been pinpointed 13.7 billion
years ago, when the dark matter that accounts for much of the universe’s mass
was shattered by light, as the first protostar was born. But the formation
of the protostars, the first objects in the Universe, has remained a mystery
for astronomers.
However, a team of international experts announced the
successful computer simulation of the birth of a protostar, starting with
recreating the primordial conditions and ingredients that led to the evolution
of the Universe as diverse as wee see it today, with starts, planets and other
celestial bodies.
Following the Big Bang was a period of Dark Ages, which
cosmologists still had no knowledge about, due to the fact that the first stars
that should have offered information about how it all began have disappeared by
now.
Looking at the stars now, it would be almost impossible to
recreate the conditions in the early stages of the Universe. But the team of
scientists led by physicist Naoki Yoshida of Nagoya University, Japan, revealed
that the primordial stars needed only a simple mixture of hydrogen, helium and
dark matter to form, as magnetic fields and other cosmic phenomena that could
influence the birth of a star did not exist.
With the help of a computer simulation, scientists were able
to track the formation of a primordial gas cloud, which later creates the
conditions for nuclear reactions that turn the mass of gas into a real star. However,
establishing a model for this transformation hasn’t been achieved yet, as it
would require very powerful computers to reproduce.
We still know very little about early star formation, and
there are still essential processes that led to the birth of early stars that
we need to understand. But the achievement of the international team “puts the
finishing touches to the decade-old quest to build the first star from first
principles,” said astrophysicist Volker Bromm from the University of Texas,
Austin.
Image Credit: N. Yoshida et al., Science
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