Cool brown dwarfs are a hot topic in astronomy right now. Smaller than
stars and bigger than giant planets, they hold promise for helping us
understand both stellar evolution and planet formation. New work from a
team including Carnegie’s Jonathan Gagné has discovered several
ultracool brown dwarfs in our own solar neighborhood. Their findings are
published in The Astrophysical Journal.
Brown dwarfs are sometimes called failed stars. They are too small to
sustain the hydrogen fusion process that powers stars, so after forming
they slowly cool, contract, and dim over time. Their temperatures can
range from nearly as hot as a star to as cool as a planet and their
masses also range between star-like and giant-planet-like.
They’re fascinating to astronomers for a variety of reasons, mostly
because they can serve as a bridge between stars and planets and how the
former influences the latter, particular when it comes to composition
and atmospheric properties. But much about them remains unknown.
“Everyone will benefit from the study of brown dwarfs, because they can
often be found in isolation, which means that we can more easily gather
precise data on their properties without a bright star blinding our
instruments," Gagné said, who is also a collaborator of the Institute
for Research on Exoplanets (iREx) at Université de Montréal.
Discovering new brown dwarfs will help scientists to better quantify the
frequency at which they occur both in our solar neighborhood and
beyond. Knowing the abundance and distribution of brown dwarfs provides
key information on the distribution of mass in the universe, and on the
mechanism of brown dwarf formation, for example, whether they form in
isolation or instead are ejected from larger planetary systems.
To that end, the team, led by Jasmin Robert of Université de Montréal,
believed that although hundreds of ultracool brown dwarfs have already
been discovered, the techniques used to identify them were overlooking
those with more-unusual compositions, which would not show up in the
color-based surveys generally used.
So they surveyed 28 percent of the sky and discovered 165 ultracool
brown dwarfs, about a third of which have unusual compositions or other
peculiarities. When talking about brown dwarfs, ultracool means
temperatures under about 3,500 Fahrenheit or 2,200 kelvin
“The search for ultracool brown dwarfs in the neighborhood of our own
Solar System is far from over,” said Gagné. “Our findings indicate that
many more are hiding in existing surveys.”
Credit: carnegiescience.edu
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