Most Pristine Star Ever Found – A Window to the Early Universe
Astronomers have found the most pristine star ever. Its name is SDSS J0715-7334. This star offers a rare window into the early universe.An international team made the discovery. They used data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-V. Follow-up observations came from Magellan telescopes in Chile. The study appears in Nature Astronomy.The star belongs to the second generation of stars. It formed just a few billion years after the Big Bang. Therefore, it is incredibly old and chemically pure.
What Makes This Star So Unique
This star has very few heavy elements. In fact, it contains less than 0.005% of the Sun’s metal content. That is half the heavy elements of the previous record holder. It also has extremely low levels of iron and carbon.As a result, scientists call it the most metal-poor star known. “These pristine stars are windows into the dawn of stars and galaxies,” says lead researcher Alexander Ji.
Where Did It Come From?
The star is located about 80,000 light-years from Earth. However, it likely formed outside the Milky Way. It was later drawn into our galaxy. Researchers used data from the Gaia mission to confirm this.The team included undergraduate students. They traveled to Las Campanas Observatory in Chile. There, they used the Magellan Clay telescope. Their first observing run confirmed the discovery in the early morning hours.
Why This Discovery Matters
Early stars burned fast and died young. They created heavier elements through fusion. Then, they scattered those elements into space. Later generations of stars formed from this enriched material.Finding a star with so little metal is rare. It preserves clues about how star formation evolved. Surveys like SDSS-V help find these “needles in the stellar haystack.” As Juna Kollmeier explains, “We have to look in our cosmic backyard.”This discovery also trains the next generation of astronomers. It shows how curiosity and teamwork drive science forward.

