Failed star

Published: 9 January 2002 y., Wednesday
Astronomers have caught a remarkable image of a brown dwarf circling a nearby star. A brown dwarf is too big to be a planet but too small to be a star and although a great many have been detected before, this is the first time one has been directly imaged so close to its companion. It was done using the relatively new technique of adaptive optics, which allows astronomers to get a much clearer view through the Earth's turbulent and distorting atmosphere. The discovery raises questions about how brown dwarfs and planets are formed. Because brown dwarfs are intermediate objects between planets and stars, they are often described as "failed stars"; they are more massive than Jupiter, the largest planet in our Solar System, but fall short of the minimum mass needed to sustain nuclear fusion. This is estimated to be 8% of the Sun's mass. The brown dwarf is orbiting a star called 15 Sagittae (Sge), which is about one to three billion years old, making it slightly younger than our Sun. It is located approximately 58 light-years from Earth. It is separated from its parent star by less than the distance that separates the planet Uranus from the Sun. This makes it the smallest-separation brown-dwarf companion yet seen directly. The research team behind the discovery estimate the mass of the brown dwarf to be 55 to 78 times the mass of planet Jupiter.
Šaltinis: BBC News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Donate an organ, save a life

Some 56 000 people in the EU are currently waiting for a transplant operation. Every day 12 of them die waiting for an organ to be donated. more »

China aims at weak eyesight

Every day, across the vast country, Chinese school children put down their pens and perform a series of government-devised exercises intended to strengthen their eyes. more »

US teen lives 118 days without heart

D. Simmons said the experience of living for so long with a machine pumping her blood was "scary." more »

For kids, an apple a day could keep obesity at bay

A recent report found that children in Europe are not getting enough fruit and vegetables, so the European Commission is proposing to set aside money to ensure they get weekly fruit. more »

Drug use “historically high”, says EU monitoring centre

Every year 7,000-8,000 people in the EU die because of drug use and a drugs overdose remains one of the main causes of death among young people. more »

Mediterranean eating - “reduces mortality”

Bad health through a bad diet is a growing problem across Europe. more »

Commission approves €90 million in French R&D aid to personalised medicine programme “ADNA”

In accordance with the EC Treaty rules on state aid, the European Commission has approved aid worth €90 million to be granted by France to the R&D programme “ADNA” covering the development of personalised medicine for infectious diseases, cancer and genetic diseases. more »

Pink October: Get screened for breast cancer!

October is international breast cancer awareness month. In Europe alone there are an estimated 430,000 new cases a year and in the EU breast cancer will affect one in 10 women before the age of 80. more »

President Underwent Corrective Eye Surgery

Today in the afternoon, President Valdas Adamkus had a lens replacement surgery in his right eye at Santariškių Clinical Hospital. more »

Bird flu outbreak ends in Turkey, says doctor

The last four suspected bird flu patients two of them confirmed to have contracted the deadly H5N1 strain were discharged from a hospital in eastern Turkey, signalling an end to the recent outbreak, a doctor said on Saturday. more »