"As a result of all of this work, Bond and his collaborators estimated HD 140283's age to be 14.46 billion years. It was a significant reduction on the 16 billion previously claimed but it was still more than the age of the universe itself."
The problem of finding objects in the universe dated older than when the universe appears in the expanding universe model (BB for example), has been around for decades. Originally H0 = 500 km/s/Mpc and the universe dated about 2 billion years old yet uranium dated Earth rocks were at least 3 billion years old according to the published ages. Globular clusters were dated older than the *beginning of the universe* too and other objects. Other stars are reported with ages older than the universe, see
In Search of Ancient Suns - Sky & Telescope - Sky & Telescope (skyandtelescope.org)
Using cosmology calculators, this problem is easy to see, if objects dated older are clearly presented to the public
Cosmology Calculators (caltech.edu) ,
Cosmology calculator | kempner.net,
LAMBDA - Links to Calculators (nasa.gov)
My observation. The age of the universe can vary based upon different input parameters like for H0 using the cosmology calculators,
https://ned.ipac.caltech.edu/help/cosmology_calc.html, and,
https://www.kempner.net/cosmic.php. A good example is the kempner.net calculator. Using H0 = 70 km/s/Mpc, the age of the universe is “age of the Universe at z = 13.2451 Gyr” when z = 0 and H0 = 70 km/s/Mpc. Thus some stars can still be dated older than the universe beginning using BB cosmology calculators. This was a problem when H0 = 500 km/s/Mpc in the early days of redshift surveys with the universe age near 2 billion years old. Using cosmology calculator I, H0 = 70 km/s/Mpc and z = 0, the universe age is "It is now 13.642 Gyr since the Big Bang. The age at redshift z was 13.642 Gyr." Using cosmology calculator II with H0 = 70 km/s/Mpc z =0, universe age is "Age of the universe: 13.4112 Gyr, which is 100% of the age of the universe today. Lookback time: 0 Gyr." The Hubble time for age of the universe in the expanding universe model for the BB is very sensitive to input parameter changes. The list of 5 very old stars in the S&T report is a good start. What I would like to see, a database tracking all of the reports here and changes in ages to reconcile since they first appeared when the universe was considered to be only about 2 billion years old. This should be clearly presented to the public I feel. Space.com, thanks for this report.
"Further refinements saw the age of HD 140283 fall a bit more. A 2014 follow-up study, for instance, updated the star's age to 14.27 billion years. "Again, if one includes all sources of uncertainty — both in the observational measurements and the theoretical modeling — the error is about 700 or 800 million years, so there is no conflict because 13.8 billion years lies within the star's error bar," Bond said. What's more, in May 2021, another group of astronomers revised the best estimates for the age and mass of Methuselah and, having modeled how stars change over time, they found its age to be 12 billion years. It still makes HD 140283 extremely old (the sun, by comparison, is only a kid at 4.6 billion years old) but it puts the age of the star well and truly within the age of the universe. Or does it?"