The first stars in the universe were not as  solitary as previously thought. In fact, they could have formed  alongside numerous companions when the gas disks that surrounded them  broke up during formation, giving birth to sibling stars in the  fragments.These are the findings of studies performed with the aid of  computer simulations by researchers at Heidelberg University's Centre  for Astronomy together with colleagues at the Max Planck Institute for  Astrophysics in Garching and the University of Texas at Austin (USA).  The group's findings, just published the journal Science, cast an  entirely new light on the formation of the first stars after the Big  Bang.
Stars evolve from cosmic gas clouds in a  fierce and complex battle between gravity and internal gas pressure. The  density of the gas increases due to its own gravitational pull. This  causes the gas to heat up, as a consequence the pressure rises, and the  compression process comes to a halt. If the gas manages to get rid of  the thermal energy, compression can continue and a new star is born.  This cooling process works especially well if the gas contains chemical  elements like carbon or oxygen. Stars forming in this way are normally  low in mass, like our Sun. But in the early universe these elements had  yet to emerge, so the primordial cosmic gas could not cool down very  well. Accordingly, most theoretical models predict the masses of  primordial stars to be about a hundred times greater than that of the  Sun.
 Heidelberg astrophysicist Dr. Paul Clark  and his colleagues investigated these processes with the help of very  high resolution computer simulations. Their findings indicate that this  simple picture needs to be revised and that the early universe was not  only populated by huge, solitary stars. The reason is the underlying  physics of the so called accretion disks accompanying the birth of the  very first stars. The gas from which a new star forms rotates, and so  the gas is unable to fall directly onto the star, but first builds up a  disk-like structure. Only as a result of internal friction can the gas  continue to flow onto the star. If more mass falls onto this disk than  it can transport inwards, it becomes unstable and breaks into several  fragments. So instead of forming just one star at the centre,a group of  several stars is formed. The distances between some of the stars can be  as small as that between Earth and the Sun.
According to Dr. Clark, this realisation  opens up exciting new avenues for detecting the first stars in the  universe. In the final stages of their lives, binaries or multiple  stellar systems can produce intense bursts of X-rays or gamma rays.  Future space missions are being planned specifically to investigate such  bursts from the early universe. It is also conceivable that some of the  first stars may have been catapulted out of their birth group through  collisions with their neighbours before they were able to accumulate a  great deal of mass. Unlike short-lived high-mass stars, low-mass stars  may survive for billions of years. "Intriguingly," says Dr. Clark, "some  low-mass primordial stars may even have survived to the present day,  allowing us to probe the earliest stages of star and galaxy formation  right in our own cosmic backyard."
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