I’ve always had a passion for origins, which is why I once pondered a career in paleontology. The idea of working at an excavation where I could examine the remains of things that had lived hundreds of millions of years ago was galvanizing, and I read deeply into what we knew about the planet’s earliest creatures. Later, understanding that the most distant objects we see are also the oldest, I transferred that passion for origins into an interest in cosmology.

So a recent finding out of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is heady stuff indeed. There, astonomers Leslie Looney, Brian Fields and a sharp undergraduate named John Tobin have been studying the birth of our Sun by looking at the descendants — ‘daughter species’ — of the short-lived radioactive isotopes found in early meteorites. The isotopes themselves are created in supernova explosions; they become mixed with the nebular gas and dust that will eventually condense into stars, planets and debris like meteorites.

The picture that emerges is striking. A massive star whose distance can be roughly calculated from the abundances of these daughter species blew up from within a cluster of hundreds or perhaps thousands of low-mass stars like the Sun. “The supernova was stunningly close; much closer to the sun than any star is today,” said Fields. “Our solar system was still in the process of forming when the supernova occurred.”

The study looks at probable distances in two scenarios. If the supernova and our Sun formed at around the same time, then the astronomers calculate the distance between the Solar nebula and the supernova ranged from 0.1 to 1.6 parsecs. If the supernova actually triggered the Sun’s later formation, the distances can go as high as 4 parsecs. “This sounds surprisingly close,” write Looney and Fields, “but it is consistent with typical distances found for low-mass stars clustering around one or more massive stars. We posit that our Sun was a member of such a cluster that has since dispersed.”

What this work implies is that planetary systems are resilient enough to weather such catastrophes, an indication that even in roiling stellar nurseries, the early rounds of planet formation should not be ruled out. The stars which formed near the Sun have moved away over the eons, but it’s a working assumption that the majority of stars in the galaxy came out of star clusters like these. And that would make our Solar System a relatively common example of planetary formation, still more evidence that the galaxy at large must be teeming with systems that can weather and build upon nearby cosmic cataclysms.

The preprint of Looney, et al., “Radioactive Probes of the Supernova-Contaminated Solar Nebula: Evidence that the Sun was Born in a Cluster” can be found here. The paper has been accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal.