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ESO Education and Public Relations Dept.
-------------------------------------------------------------- Text with all links and the photos are available on the ESO Website at URL: http://www.eso.org/outreach/press-re.../pr-11-06.html -------------------------------------------------------------- Contact: Markus Kasper ESO, Garching, Germany Phone: +49 89 3200 6359 Beth Biller, Laird Close University of Arizona, USA Phone: +1 520 621 2589, +1 520 626 5992 For immediate release: 22 March 2006 ESO Science Release 11/06 The Sun's New Exotic Neighbour Very Cool Brown Dwarf Discovered Around Star in the Solar Neighbourhood Using ESO's Very Large Telescope in Chile, an international team of researchers [1] discovered a brown dwarf belonging to the 24th closest stellar system to the Sun. Brown dwarfs are intermediate objects that are neither stars nor planets. This object is the third closest brown dwarf to the Earth yet discovered, and one of the coolest, having a temperature of about 750 degrees Centigrade. It orbits a very small star at about 4.5 times the mean distance between the Earth and the Sun. Its mass is estimated to be somewhere between 9 and 65 times the mass of Jupiter. At a time when astronomers are peering into the most distant Universe, looking at objects as far as 13 billion light-years away, one may think that our close neighbourhood would be very well known. Not so. Astronomers still find new star-like objects in our immediate vicinity. Using ESO's VLT, they just discovered a brown dwarf companion to the red star SCR 1845-6357, the 36th closest star to the Sun. ESO PR Photo 11a/06 New Brown Dwarf in the Solar Neighbourhood (Artist's Impression) Caption: Artist's impression of the SCR 1845-6357 stellar system. The small red star is shown in the background while the newly discovered brown dwarf is at front. "This newly found brown dwarf is a valuable object because its distance is well known, allowing us to determine with precision its intrinsic brightness", said team member Markus Kasper (ESO). "Moreover, from its orbital motion, we should be able in a few years to estimate its mass. These properties are vital for understanding the nature of brown dwarfs." To discover this brown dwarf, the team used the high-contrast adaptive optics NACO Simultaneous Differential Imager (SDI [2]) on ESO's Very Large Telescope, an instrument specifically developed to search for extrasolar planets. The SDI camera enhances the ability of the VLT and its adaptive optics system to detect faint companions that would normally be lost in the glare of the primary star. In particular, the SDI camera provides additional, often very useful spectral information which can be used to determine a rough temperature for the object without follow-up observations. ESO PR Photo 11b/06 The System SCR 1845-6357 (NACO-SDI/VLT) Caption: Three-colour image of SCR1845-6357AB generated from the SDI filter images (blue=1.575 micron, green=1.600 micron, red=1.625 micron). Since the T-dwarf fades away towards the longer wavelengths, it appears quite blue in this image. It is roughly 50 times fainter than the star and is separated from it by an angle of 1.17 arcsecond on the sky (4.5 times the Earth-Sun distance). Located 12.7 light-years away from us, the newly found object is nevertheless not the closest brown dwarf. This honour goes indeed to the two brown dwarfs surrounding the star Epsilon Indi, located 11.8 light years away (see ESO PR 01/03). However, this newly discovered brown dwarf is unique in many aspects. "Besides being extremely close to Earth, this object is a T dwarf -- a very cool brown dwarf -- and the only such object found as a companion to a low-mass star," said Beth Biller, a graduate student at the University of Arizona and lead author of the paper reporting the discovery. "It is also likely the brightest known object of its temperature because it is so close." The discovery of this brown dwarf hints that, at least close to the Sun, cool brown dwarfs prefer to be part of a couple with a star or another brown dwarf, rather than wandering alone in the cosmic emptiness. Indeed, of the seven cool brown dwarfs that reside within 20 light years of the Sun, five have a companion. "This has wide-ranging implications for theories of brown dwarf formation, which, until now, tend to favour the production of single brown dwarfs," said team member Laird Close (University of Arizona). ESO PR Photo 11c/06 Stars in the Solar Neighbourhood Caption: Three-dimensional map of all known stellar systems within 12.7 light-years from the Sun. SCR 1845-6357 appears towards the bottom right hand corner of the image. This map was adapted from images by Richard Powell at atlasoftheuniverse.com. ESO PR Photo 11d/06 Images of SCR 1845-6357 A and B Caption: A movie of the SDI camera's images of the low mass star SCR 1845A and its companion, SCR 1845B. Note how the brown dwarf companion (B) is clearly changing in brightness in and out of the SDI methane filters. This proves that B is methane-rich and is thus a rare cool low-mass brown dwarf companion. Moreover, it is also clear that the "halo of speckles" around the much hotter primary star do not change significantly in the three SDI filters. Hence the star's halo can be removed by subtracting the different images, showing that the detection of a faint methane-rich companion (even 10 times closer than B) is made possible with the SDI camera. High resolution images and their captions are available at http://www.eso.org/outreach/press-re...hot-11-06.html More information The work presented here will appear as a Letter to the Editor in the Astrophysical Journal ("Discovery of a Very Nearby Brown Dwarf to the Sun: A Methane Rich Brown Dwarf Companion to the Low Mass Star SCR 1845-6357", by B. Biller et al.). Notes [1]: The team is composed of Beth Biller and Laird Close (Steward Observatory, University of Arizona, Tucson, USA), Markus Kasper (ESO, Garching, Germany), Wolfgang Brandner (Max-Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg, Germany), and Stephan Kellner (W.M. Keck Observatory, Waimea, Hawaii, USA). [2]: The NACO SDI camera is a unique type of camera using adaptive optics, which removes the blurring effects of Earth's atmosphere to produce extremely sharp images. SDI splits light from a single star into four identical images and then passes the resulting beams through three slightly different (methane-sensitive) filters. Only cool low-mass objects will have methane in their atmospheres and so only these objects will change brightness in the SDI filters. When the filtered light beams hit the camera's detector array, astronomers can subtract the images so the bright star disappears, revealing a fainter, cooler object otherwise hidden in the star's scattered light halo ("glare"). The SDI camera was developed and deployed by Laird Close (Steward Observatory, University of Arizona) and Rainer Lenzen (Max- Planck-Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg) in collaboration with ESO. National contacts for the media: Belgium: Dr. Rodrigo Alvarez, +32-2-474 70 50 Finland: Ms. Riitta Tirronen, +358 9 7748 8369 Denmark: Dr. Michael Linden-Vørnle, +45-33-18 19 97 France: Dr. Daniel Kunth, +33-1-44 32 80 85 Germany: Dr. Jakob Staude, +49-6221-528229 Italy: Dr. Leopoldo Benacchio, benacchio @ inaf.it The Netherlands: Ms. Marieke Baan, +31-20-525 74 80 Portugal: Prof. Teresa Lago, +351-22-089 833 Sweden: Dr. Jesper Sollerman, +46-8-55 37 85 54 Switzerland: Dr. Martin Steinacher, +41-31-324 23 82 United Kingdom: Mr. Peter Barratt, +44-1793-44 20 25 -------------------------------------------------------------- ESO Press Information is available on the WWW at http://www.eso.org/outreach/press-rel/ -------------------------------------------------------------- (c) ESO Education & Public Relations Department Karl-Schwarzschild-Strasse 2, D-85748 Garching, Germany -------------------------------------------------------------- |
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