Beijing-SANA

A scientific study has revealed the first observational evidence of the life of the oldest stars in the universe.

According to media, the study, in which scientists from China, Japan and Australia participated, showed the unique chemical fingerprints of stars in the halo of the Milky Way galaxy, using two of the world's largest ground-based telescopes.

Thanks to their findings using the large-sky multi-object fiber telescope near Beijing and the Subaru telescope in Hawaii, scientists found that so-called first-generation stars lit up the universe about 100 to 250 million years after the Big Fission.

The study provided the first observational evidence that stars ended their lives with an unusual explosion, unlike today's supernovae that have only been theoretically predicted so far.

The supernova is a star that suddenly shines tremendously, multiplying its radiation hundreds of times.

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