![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Coolest stars come out of the dark: Spitzer spies frigid brown dwarfs
"Most of the new brown dwarfs found by Spitzer are thought to belong to the coolest known class of brown dwarfs, called T dwarfs, which are defined as being less than about 1,500 Kelvin (2,240 degrees Fahrenheit). One of the objects appears to be so cold that it may even be a long-sought Y dwarf -- a proposed class of even colder stars. The T and Y classes are part of a larger system categorizing all stars; for example, the hottest, most massive stars are O stars; our sun is a G star." http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases...cience+News%29 |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 5, 10:44*am, Yousuf Khan wrote:
Coolest stars come out of the dark: Spitzer spies frigid brown dwarfs "Most of the new brown dwarfs found by Spitzer are thought to belong to the coolest known class of brown dwarfs, called T dwarfs, which are defined as being less than about 1,500 Kelvin (2,240 degrees Fahrenheit). One of the objects appears to be so cold that it may even be a long-sought Y dwarf -- a proposed class of even colder stars. The T and Y classes are part of a larger system categorizing all stars; for example, the hottest, most massive stars are O stars; our sun is a G star.."http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/06/100629112152.htm?utm_sou... Kirkpatrick says that it's possible that WISE could find an icy, Neptune-sized or bigger object in the far reaches of our solar system -- thousands of times farther from the sun than Earth. There is some speculation amongst scientists that such a cool body, if it exists, could be a brown dwarf companion to our sun. This hypothetical object has been nicknamed "Nemesis." "We are now calling the hypothetical brown dwarf Tyche instead, after the benevolent counterpart to Nemesis," said Kirkpatrick. "Although there is only limited evidence to suggest a large body in a wide, stable orbit around the sun, WISE should be able to find it, or rule it out altogether." Does this sound like Sitchens Planet X? Ooops, I said a bad word, Sitchen...... RT |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
OBSERVATIONS: WISE satellite already spots two brown dwarfs | Sam Wormley[_2_] | Amateur Astronomy | 0 | May 28th 10 10:54 PM |
Doctor Who "The Impossible Planet" / "The Satan Pit" ***Spoilers! | Martin Dunne | History | 7 | September 26th 06 10:59 PM |
Article "Not a Bleep in Alien Search"..." SETI is a waste of effort" | Jason H. | SETI | 0 | June 6th 06 04:14 PM |
$ All sub-SYSTEMs have "surroundings", duh. Sub-SYSTEMs are "submerged" in SYSTEM "working fluid" AMBiENT. Sub-SYSTEMs ONLY EXCHANGE energy with "working fluid" AMBiENT. Go-go Google GROUP SEARCH: < | brian a m stuckless | Policy | 0 | November 23rd 05 11:34 AM |
$ All sub-SYSTEMs have "surroundings", duh. Sub-SYSTEMs are "submerged" in SYSTEM "working fluid" AMBiENT. Sub-SYSTEMs ONLY EXCHANGE energy with "working fluid" AMBiENT. Go-go Google GROUP SEARCH: < | brian a m stuckless | Astronomy Misc | 0 | November 23rd 05 11:34 AM |