Fluorine can be found in everyday products such as toothpaste and fluorine chewing gum. However, the origins of the chemical element have been somewhat of a mystery.
Astronomers at Lund University in Sweden, together with colleagues from Ireland and the US found that fluorine formed in stars similar to the Sun but heavier, towards the end of their existence.
The Sun and the planets in our solar system have then been formed out of material from these dead stars.
With doctoral student Henrik Jonsson and colleagues from Ireland and the US, Ryde studied stars formed at different points in the history of the universe to see if the amount of fluorine they contain agrees with the predictions of the theory.
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By analysing the light emitted by a star, it is possible to calculate how much of different elements it contains. Light of a certain wavelength indicates a certain element.
In the study, the researchers used a telescope on Hawaii and a new type of instrument that is sensitive to light with a wavelength in the middle of the infrared spectrum.
After that, the star casts off the outer parts and forms a planetary nebula. The fluorine that is thrown out in this process mixes with the gas that surrounds the stars, known as the interstellar medium.
New stars and planets are then formed from the interstellar medium. When the new stars die, the interstellar medium is enriched once again.