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Stellar population

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Illustration of the Milky Way. The blue regions in the spiral arms are made of the younger population I stars. The yellow stars in the central bulge are the older population II stars. In reality, many population I stars are also mixed in with the older population II stars.

Stars are grouped into stellar populations, depending on the fractions of chemical elements inside the star. In astronomy, all elements except hydrogen and helium are called metals. Elements like carbon and oxygen are called metals in astronomy, even though they are non-metals in chemistry. The metallicity of a star is the amount of metals in it.

There are three stellar populations: population 1, population 2, and population 3.

  • Population 1 stars have high amounts of metals, like our Sun. They are mostly found in the spiral arms of the Milky Way Galaxy. They are the newest stars.
  • Population 2 stars have low amounts of metals. They are mostly found in the central bulge of the Milky Way Galaxy. They are older stars.
  • Population 3 stars have not been seen directly. They probably lived early in the Universe. They would have had almost no metals - they would be almost entirely hydrogen and helium. These stars probably created the first heavy elements that became part of later stars.
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