Small Brown Dwarf found

Small Brown Dwarf found

Science

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chemist

Linkenheim

Joined
22 Apr 05
Moves
656125
140d

https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Webb/Webb_identifies_tiniest_free-floating_brown_dwarf

It is interesting to see the borderline between a planet and a brown dwarf aka. failed star.

Australia

Joined
20 Jan 09
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386341
138d

@Ponderable

They're getting close to each other. From your link:
Astronomers are trying to determine the smallest object that can form in a star-like manner. An international team using the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope has identified the new record-holder: a tiny, free-floating brown dwarf with only three to four times the mass of Jupiter.

Australia

Joined
20 Jan 09
Moves
386341
138d

@Ponderable

They're getting close to each other. From your link:
Astronomers are trying to determine the smallest object that can form in a star-like manner. An international team using the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope has identified the new record-holder: a tiny, free-floating brown dwarf with only three to four times the mass of Jupiter.

It's hard to get the mind around a "tiny" "dwarf" object 3-4 times the mass of Jupiter.

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

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138d

@Kewpie
I think they were able to measure the mass and it is more massive but the only heat comes from it's own internal heat sources which does not include fusion so the surprising thing to me is how long it can keep up such heat, billions of years of it.

chemist

Linkenheim

Joined
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656125
138d

@sonhouse said
@Kewpie
I think they were able to measure the mass and it is more massive but the only heat comes from it's own internal heat sources which does not include fusion so the surprising thing to me is how long it can keep up such heat, billions of years of it.
Probably not "billions" just "millions", IC 348 is a so-called "Star-craddle" where (comparatively) recently stars were formed. ESA looked for brown dwarf especially in regions, where still some temperature is to be expected to get them onto their infrared instrument 😉

There is a not so new paper on the cluster:
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1086/376594/pdf

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

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1 edit

@Ponderable
Ah, so it is early in its career🙂 I wonder if Webb will look for those dwarfs too? It shines in IR.

Insanity at Masada

tinyurl.com/mw7txe34

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Amuzati Nzoli?

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2004/03/meet-the-world-s-most-famous-pygmy.html

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

Joined
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@AThousandYoung
Bit of a stretch there.....