Binary Brown Dwarfs | 24 Oct 2024
Recently, researchers discovered that a brown dwarf Gliese 229B found in 1995 is actually two (binary) brown dwarfs (Gliese 229Ba and 229Bb) orbiting closely around each other while circling a small star.
- This rare binary brown dwarf is located 19 light-years (1 light year = 9.5 trillion km) away in the constellation Lepus.
- It orbits a common red dwarf star with a mass about six-tenths that of our sun.
- A red dwarf is the smallest, coolest type of star, making up 60-70% of stars in the Milky Way. Its red colour indicates a low temperature.
- About Brown Dwarf: Brown dwarfs are celestial objects between planets and stars, too small for nuclear fusion but larger than the biggest planets like Jupiter.
- They are capable of burning deuterium (a heavy form of hydrogen) but lack the mass to sustain the fusion of regular hydrogen like stars.
Read More: Star Formation in Dwarf Galaxies