Beginner
Scientists found a very special galaxy far away in space. A galaxy is a huge group of stars. This galaxy is called LAP1-B.
The scientists used a space telescope called James Webb. This telescope is very powerful. It can see very old and very faint things in space.
LAP1-B is a very, very old galaxy. It was there only 800 million years after the start of the universe. The start of the universe is called the Big Bang.
This galaxy has very little oxygen in it. Scientists think it may have some of the very first stars ever made. These first stars are called Population III stars.
- galaxy
- a huge group of billions of stars, gas, and dust held together by gravity
- telescope
- a tool used to see objects that are very far away
- universe
- all of space, time, matter, and energy that exists
- Big Bang
- the huge explosion about 14 billion years ago that scientists believe started the universe
- star
- a huge ball of burning gas in space
- oxygen
- a common gas found in stars, planets, and the air we breathe
- ancient
- very, very old
- faint
- very dim or difficult to see
Elementary
A team of scientists led by Kimihiko Nakajima from Kanazawa University in Japan has used the James Webb Space Telescope to discover an extraordinary galaxy. The galaxy, called LAP1-B, is one of the oldest and most primitive ever found anywhere in the universe.
LAP1-B existed just 800 million years after the Big Bang, when the universe was still very young. The telescope was able to observe it because of a natural phenomenon called gravitational lensing. A massive galaxy cluster in front of LAP1-B bends and magnifies its light by about 100 times, acting like a giant lens in space.
What makes LAP1-B so special is its very low oxygen content. Scientists found that its oxygen abundance is only 0.0042 percent of the amount in our Sun. This extreme scarcity of oxygen suggests that the galaxy is very chemically primitive - it has not yet been enriched by many generations of stars forming and dying.
Scientists believe LAP1-B may contain some Population III stars - the very first generation of stars that ever formed in the universe. These stars were made of pure hydrogen and helium. No one has ever directly observed a Population III star before. The study was published in the prestigious journal Nature.
- gravitational lensing
- the bending of light from a distant object by the gravity of a closer, massive object, which magnifies the distant object
- chemically primitive
- containing very few heavy elements because few generations of stars have lived and died in the galaxy
- abundance
- the amount of a particular substance present in something
- Population III stars
- the theoretical first generation of stars in the universe, made entirely of hydrogen and helium
- magnify
- to make something appear larger or more powerful than it really is
- scarcity
- the state of being very rare or in short supply
- generation
- a group of people, stars, or things produced during the same time period
- enrich
- to add heavier chemical elements to a gas cloud through the explosions of dying stars
Intermediate
An international team led by Kimihiko Nakajima of Kanazawa University has used the James Webb Space Telescope and gravitational lensing to produce the most detailed characterization yet of LAP1-B, an ultra-faint galaxy observed just 800 million years after the Big Bang. Their paper, published in Nature, identifies LAP1-B as the most chemically primitive star-forming galaxy ever discovered, with a gas-phase oxygen abundance of only 4.2 x 10 to the negative 3 of the solar value - a figure more than ten times lower than any previous measurement at a comparable epoch.
The galaxy was observable only because a massive foreground cluster acts as a natural gravitational lens, amplifying LAP1-B's light by a factor of approximately 100. Without this magnification, even the James Webb Space Telescope's sensitivity would have been insufficient to resolve the faint spectral emission lines needed to measure its chemical composition. The researchers analyzed multiple oxygen emission lines to derive the galaxy's temperature, density, and elemental abundances.
The extremely low oxygen content implies that LAP1-B has undergone very few cycles of stellar birth, death, and chemical enrichment. In most galaxies, successive generations of stars fuse hydrogen and helium into heavier elements, progressively increasing the oxygen and metal content of the surrounding gas. LAP1-B's near-zero oxygen level points to a population that may include Population III stars - the universe's theoretical first stellar generation, composed entirely of primordial hydrogen and helium.
Population III stars have never been directly observed. Their existence is inferred from theoretical models of early cosmic chemistry, which predict they would have been extremely massive, hot, and short-lived. LAP1-B's ionization characteristics - the way it energizes its surrounding gas - are consistent with the intense radiation expected from such early stars. If confirmed, this would be the closest scientists have ever come to a direct window onto the epoch when the universe first lit up with starlight.
- gas-phase oxygen abundance
- the measured amount of oxygen present in the gas surrounding stars within a galaxy
- spectral emission line
- a specific wavelength of light emitted by a hot gas element, used to identify its chemical composition
- stellar nucleosynthesis
- the process by which stars produce heavier elements from hydrogen and helium through nuclear fusion
- primordial
- existing at or from the earliest stages of the universe, before any stars had formed
- ionization
- the process by which intense radiation strips electrons from atoms in surrounding gas
- chemical enrichment
- the gradual increase in heavy elements in a galaxy as successive generations of stars form and explode
- epoch
- a distinct and specific period in cosmic history
Advanced
The observational confirmation of LAP1-B's chemical primitivity by Nakajima et al. in Nature (volume 653, 2026) advances one of cosmological observational astronomy's oldest standing puzzles: the direct detection of Population III stellar populations. Since Bromm, Coppi and Larson's foundational 1999 theoretical paper, the standard model of cosmic dawn has posited that the first stellar generation - born from primordial H/He gas in a metal-free environment, uncontaminated by any prior nucleosynthetic enrichment - would have had masses of 100 to 1,000 solar masses, effective temperatures exceeding 100,000 K, and prodigious ionizing photon production rates that drove the epoch of reionization to completion. LAP1-B, at a rest-frame redshift placing it ~800 Myr after the Big Bang, provides the most chemically pristine observational handle on this population yet assembled.
The oxygen abundance of (4.2 +- 1.8) x 10 to the negative 3 solar - derived from [OIII]4959,5007 and [OII]3727 collisionally excited emission lines using the direct electron-temperature (Te) method - is two to three times lower than any previously published star-forming galaxy measurement at a comparable epoch and an order of magnitude below the floor historically associated with Lyman-break starburst galaxies in the Hubble era. The measurement is robust against aperture-integration biases because the gravitational amplification factor of ~100 enables spatial decomposition at a physical scale of ~100 parsecs in the source plane, comparable to individual HII region sizes.
The ionization diagnostics present the most scientifically provocative aspect of the data. LAP1-B's position on the BPT emission-line diagnostic diagram - extreme [OIII]/H-beta at low [NII]/H-alpha - overlaps with CLOUDY photoionization models of stellar populations at sub-10 to the negative 3 solar metallicity. The team's Bayesian spectral decomposition finds that a Pop III contribution of 10-30 percent of the bolometric luminosity is compatible with the data; a pure Pop II interpretation requires an unrealistically young (<1 Myr) instantaneous burst model, making the mixed Pop III / Pop II scenario the more parsimonious interpretation under Occam's razor.
The cosmological implications extend beyond stellar taxonomy. LAP1-B's partial Lyman-alpha suppression relative to its Lyman-break morphology is consistent with a patchy reionization topology at z~7, in which ionized bubbles coexist with neutral intergalactic medium filaments - a picture also supported by recent Planck CMB optical depth refinements and the JWST JADES Early Release Science data. NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope GRAPES grism survey (slated to begin in late 2026) is expected to identify hundreds of LAP1-B analogs at z = 6-9, potentially constraining the global Pop III stellar fraction to within a factor of two by 2029 and providing the first statistical test of whether LAP1-B is an extreme outlier or a representative survivor of the first cosmic star-forming epoch.
- nucleosynthetic enrichment