The early Universe presented a star formation environment that was almost devoid of heavy elements. The lowest metallicity stars thus provide a unique window into the earliest Galactic stages, but are exceedingly rare and difficult to find. Here, we present the discovery of an ultra-metal-poor star, Pristine 221.8781+9.7844, using narrow-band Ca H & K photometry from the Pristine survey. Follow-up medium- and high-resolution spectroscopy confirms the ultra-metal-poor nature of Pristine 221.8781+9.7844 ([Fe/H] = -4.66 ± 0.13 in 1D LTE) with an enhancement of 0.3-0.4 dex in a-elements relative to Fe, and an unusually low carbon abundance. We derive an upper limit of A(C) = 5.6, well below typical A(C) values for such ultra-metal-poor stars. This makes Pristine 221.8781+9.7844 one of themostmetal-poor stars; in fact, it is very similar to the most metal-poor star known (SDSS J102915+172927). The existence of a class of ultra-metal-poor stars with low(er) carbon abundances suggest that there must have been several formation channels in the early Universe through which long-lived, low-mass stars were formed.
CITATION STYLE
Starkenburg, E., Aguado, D. S., Bonifacio, P., Caffau, E., Jablonka, P., Lardo, C., … Navarro, J. F. (2018). The Pristine survey IV: Approaching the Galactic metallicity floor with the discovery of an ultra-metal-poor star. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 481(3), 3838–3852. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty2276
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