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The early Universe had a chemical composition consisting of hydrogen, helium and traces of lithium1, almost all other elements were created in stars and supernovae. The mass fraction, Z, of elements more massive than helium, is called metallicity. A number of very metal poor stars have been found some of which, while having a low iron abundance, are rich in carbon, nitrogen and oxygen. For theoretical reasons and because of an observed absence of stars with metallicities lower than Z=1.5E-5, it has been suggested that low mass stars (M<0.8Modot, the ones that survive to the present day) cannot form until the interstellar medium has been enriched above a critical value, estimated to lie in the range 1.5E-8leqZleq1.5E-6, although competing theories claiming the contrary do exist. Here we report the chemical composition of a star with a very low Zleq6.9E-7 (4.5E-5 of that of the Sun) and a chemical pattern typical of classical extremely metal poor stars, meaning without the enrichment of carbon, nitrogen and oxygen. This shows that low mass stars can be formed at very low metallicity. Lithium is not detected, suggesting a low metallicity extension of the previously observed trend in lithium depletion. Lithium depletion implies that the stellar material must have experienced temperatures above two million K in its history, which points to rather particular formation condition or internal mixing process, for low Z stars.
The lithium abundance in turnoff stars of the old population of our Galaxy is remarkably constant in the metallicity interval -2.8textless{}[Fe/H] textless{}-2.0, defining a plateau. The Li abundance of these turnoff stars is clearly lower than the a
We investigate the kinematic and photometric properties of the Segue 3 Milky Way companion using Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopy and Magellan/IMACS g and r-band imaging. Using maximum likelihood methods to analyze the photometry, we study the structure and
The relative importance of metals and dust grains in the formation of the first low-mass stars has been a subject of debate. The recently discovered Galactic halo star SDSS J102915+172927 (Caffau et al. 2011) has a mass less than 0.8 Msun and a metal
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