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"The sky above a failed star in a distant constellation shimmers with a
beautiful green and yellow aurora one million times brighter than the northern lights. The spectacular light show is the first confirmed aurora on a body outside the solar system, and the most powerful ever recorded." http://www.theguardian.com/science/2...orthern-lights But this otherwise fine article doesn't describe how the auroras are formed! |
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On Wed, 29 Jul 2015 20:20:10 +0100, Hils wrote:
fine article Source: http://www.caltech.edu/news/failed-s...displays-47428 |
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On 29/07/2015 20:20, Hils wrote:
"The sky above a failed star in a distant constellation shimmers with a beautiful green and yellow aurora one million times brighter than the northern lights. The spectacular light show is the first confirmed aurora on a body outside the solar system, and the most powerful ever recorded." http://www.theguardian.com/science/2...orthern-lights But this otherwise fine article doesn't describe how the auroras are formed! Somewhat like on Earth the magnetic axis of the brown dwarf and its spin axis are not precisely aligned so that the auroral circle around the magnetic pole is rotating in and out of our view. The 18th magnitude object has its own Wiki entry https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LSR_J1835%2B3259 (beyond the reach of all but the largest amateur scopes) Think of it as a low budget and much less energetic pulsar or a Jupiter on steroids and you will not be too far out. Where the electrons come from that power the aurora is still unknown but stellar motion and/or orbiting planets would be the most obvious candidates. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
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On 30/07/15 04:29, JAB wrote:
On Wed, 29 Jul 2015 20:20:10 +0100, Hils wrote: fine article Source: http://www.caltech.edu/news/failed-s...displays-47428 Excellent, thanks. "In the case of brown dwarfs, charged particles cannot be driven into their magnetosphere by a stellar wind, as there is no stellar wind to do so. Hallinan says that some other source, such as an orbiting planet moving through the brown dwarf's magnetosphere, may be generating a current and producing the auroras. "But until we map the aurora accurately, we won't be able to say where it's coming from," he says." Wouldn't an "orbiting planet" have itself to be something like a gas giant to produce the charged particles? |
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