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Metallicity

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A colorful educational montage showing the planets in our solar system, including Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, as captured by NASA spacecraft.

In astronomy, metallicity is how much of an object is made of elements heavier than hydrogen and helium. Most of the matter we see in space is either hydrogen or helium. But astronomers use the word metals to talk about all the other elements, even those that aren’t usually called metals.

The globular cluster M80. Stars in globular clusters are mainly older metal-poor members of population II.

Heavier elements are made inside stars over time. When stars change and explode, they spread these heavier elements into space. This helps new stars form with more of these heavier elements. Older stars have fewer of these heavier elements because they formed when there was less of them in the universe.

Scientists measure a star’s metallicity using a value called [Fe/H]. This shows how much iron a star has compared to hydrogen, using our Sun as a reference. Iron is used because it’s easy to measure and helps us learn about how stars change over time.

Metals in early spectroscopy

In 1802, William Hyde Wollaston saw dark lines in the sun's light. In 1814, Joseph von Fraunhofer studied these lines and measured their wavelengths. These lines are called Fraunhofer lines.

Gustav Kirchhoff and Robert Bunsen found that some lines matched the light patterns of heated elements. They learned the dark lines came from chemical elements in the sun's atmosphere. They saw strong lines from metals like sodium, potassium, and iron. Early studies of the sun found only hydrogen and metals in its light. Today, in astronomy, any elements besides hydrogen and helium are called metallic.

Origin of metallic elements

See also: Stellar nucleosynthesis and Big Bang nucleosynthesis

Heavier elements, called metals by scientists, are made inside stars as they change. When stars end their lives, they spread these metals into space. This enriches the material around them and helps create new stars. Older stars usually have fewer metals than younger stars, which formed later when the universe had more metals.

Stellar populations

Population I star Rigel with reflection nebula IC 2118

Astronomers found that different stars have different amounts of elements heavier than hydrogen and helium. In 1944, an astronomer named Walter Baade said there are two main groups of stars. These groups are called population I stars, which have more heavier elements, and population II stars, which have fewer. Later, in 1978, a third group was suggested called population III stars. These may be the first stars that formed in the universe, and they would have very few heavier elements.

Common methods of calculation

Astronomers use different ways to find out how many heavier elements are in stars and other space objects. They look at how much of the object is made of gas compared to heavier elements, or they compare the numbers of atoms of different elements to what we see in the Sun.

One way they do this is by looking at the mass of hydrogen and helium in a star. Most of a star’s mass is usually just hydrogen and helium, with the rest being all the other elements, which astronomers call “metals.” By measuring how much of the star is hydrogen, helium, and the rest, they can find out how many heavier elements are there.

Another way is to look at how much iron is in a star compared to the Sun. Iron is easier to measure, and it helps tell us about the history of the star. By comparing the amount of iron to hydrogen, astronomers can figure out if a star has more or less of these heavier elements than our Sun does.

DescriptionSolar value
Hydrogen mass fraction  X ⊙ = 0.7438 ± 0.0054   {\displaystyle \ X_{\odot }=0.7438\pm 0.0054\ }
Helium mass fraction  Y ⊙ = 0.2423 ± 0.0054   {\displaystyle \ Y_{\odot }=0.2423\pm 0.0054\ }
Metal mass fraction  Z ⊙ = 0.0139 ± 0.0006 {\displaystyle \ Z_{\odot }=0.0139\pm 0.0006}
Metal-to-hydrogen ratio  Z ⊙ /   X ⊙ = 0.0187 ± 0.0009   {\displaystyle \ Z_{\odot }/\ X_{\odot }=0.0187\pm 0.0009\ }

Metallicities in various astrophysical objects

Stars

Stars with fewer heavy elements are a little warmer than stars with more heavy elements of the same size and age. Some stars, called Population II stars, have much less heavy elements than our Sun. These stars look cooler because the big ones have already ended their lives.

For stars heavier than 40 times our Sun, having more or fewer heavy elements changes how the star ends its life. Stars with fewer heavy elements might collapse directly into a black hole, while stars with more heavy elements might explode and leave behind a neutron star.

Relationship between stellar metallicity and planets

A star’s amount of heavy elements helps decide if it might have large planets. Scientists have found that stars with more heavy elements are more likely to have big planets, such as gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn. The heavy elements help form these planets in the disk of material around a young star. The Sun, which has eight planets and nine dwarf planets, is used as a reference point for comparing other stars.

H II regions

Big, hot young stars in H II regions shine with a special kind of light that can help scientists measure how many heavy elements are in these areas. These stars send out energy that knocks electrons loose from hydrogen atoms. When these electrons settle back down, they give off light at specific colors. By studying these colors, scientists can figure out how many heavy elements are present. Oxygen is one of the most common elements used for these measurements.

Metallicity calibrations at high redshift

New telescopes like the James Webb Space Telescope can now study very distant galaxies that existed when the universe was very young. These galaxies are so far away that their light has taken billions of years to reach us. Looking at these galaxies helps scientists understand how the amount of heavy elements has changed over time.

Images

A stunning view of the Crab Nebula, the remnants of a star that exploded long ago, captured by the Hubble Space Telescope.
A stunning view of Earth rising over the lunar horizon, as seen by the Apollo 8 astronauts during their historic mission.
An artist's depiction of HE 1523-0901, one of the oldest known stars in our galaxy, located about 7500 light years from Earth.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Metallicity, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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