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

A Key Transit Route

Drug Trade Earns $10Bln per Year, Top Official Says more »

China takes urgent steps to curb AIDS spread

The State Council, Chinese cabinet, in a circular publicized Sunday admitted that AIDS epidemic is still quickly spreading in the country and a series of urgent measures must be taken to change the situation more »

Nasa grounds its 'Einstein' probe

The probe will test whether space-time can be distorted by Earth's rotation more »

Russian, American and Dutch astronaut to blast off on April 19

Three astronauts will blast off for the International Space Station (ISS) on April 19 more »

WHO cites drug-resistant TB hot spots

Drug-resistant tuberculosis is a particular problem in parts of the former Soviet Union and China, but data is lacking for other potential hot spots more »

Drug-related HIV/AIDS cases on the rise in south

Injecting drug use, fuelled by illicit drug trafficking, is increasing the number of HIV/AIDS cases in southern Uzbekistan more »

The fastest-growing Aids epidemic

Aids epidemic threatens western Europe, warns UN more »

AIDS in Russia and other former Soviet republics

HIV growth rates in Estonia, Russia and Ukraine among world's highest more »

Study Finds New Form of Mad Cow Disease

Italian scientists have found a second form of mad cow disease that more closely resembles the human Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease than the usual cow form of the illness more »

The WHO investigation

Human-to-human transmission of bird flu may cause death of 2 Vietnamese more »