JPL: Closest Star System Found in a Century

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bystander
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JPL: Closest Star System Found in a Century

Post by bystander » Tue Mar 12, 2013 5:24 pm

Closest Star System Found in a Century
NASA | JPL-Caltech | WISE | 2013 Mar 11
NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) has discovered a pair of stars that has taken over the title for the third-closest star system to the sun. The duo is the closest star system discovered since 1916.

Both stars in the new binary system are "brown dwarfs," which are stars that are too small in mass to ever become hot enough to ignite hydrogen fusion. As a result, they are very cool and dim, resembling a giant planet like Jupiter more than a bright star like the sun.

"The distance to this brown dwarf pair is 6.5 light-years -- so close that Earth's television transmissions from 2006 are now arriving there," said Kevin Luhman, an associate professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State University, University Park, Pa., and a researcher in Penn State's Center for Exoplanets and Habitable Worlds.

"It will be an excellent hunting ground for planets because the system is very close to Earth, which makes it a lot easier to see any planets orbiting either of the brown dwarfs."

The results will be published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The star system is named "WISE J104915.57-531906" because it was discovered in an infrared map of the entire sky obtained by WISE. It is only slightly farther away than the second-closest star, Barnard's star, which was discovered 6 light-years from the sun in 1916. The closest star system consists of: Alpha Centauri, found to be a neighbor of the sun in 1839 at 4.4 light-years away, and the fainter Proxima Centauri, discovered in 1917 at 4.2 light-years.

Edward (Ned) Wright, the principal investigator for the WISE satellite at UCLA, said, "One major goal when proposing WISE was to find the closest stars to the sun. WISE J1049-5319 is by far the closest star found to date using the WISE data, and the close-up views of this binary system we can get with big telescopes like Gemini and the future James Webb Space Telescope will tell us a lot about the low-mass stars known as brown dwarfs."

The Gemini South telescope in Chile was also used in this study for follow-up observations.

The Closest Star System Found in a Century
Penn State University | 2013 Mar 11

Discovery of a Binary Brown Dwarf at 2 Parsecs from the Sun - K. L. Luhman
Howdy, Neighbor! New Twin Stars Are Third Closest to the Sun
Slate Blogs | Bad Astronomy | 2013 Mar 11

WISE Nabs the Closest Brown Dwarfs Yet Discovered
Universe Today | David Dickinson | 2013 Mar 13
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Ann
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Re: JPL: Closest Star System Found in a Century

Post by Ann » Tue Mar 12, 2013 5:32 pm

Would you believe I just saw this piece of news and was going to post it?
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2013-090 wrote (and Kevin Luhman said):
"It will be an excellent hunting ground for planets because it is very close to Earth, which makes it a lot easier to see any planets orbiting either of the brown dwarfs."
An excellent hunting ground for planets, eh?

I've got to wonder what those planets would be like, considering they'd be in orbit around a member of a binary brown dwarf system.

Well, Doum just posted some fascinating news about a planetary system in orbit around a star of spectral class A5V. Those planets, it has now been found, are indeed quite strange.

And to think that we Earthlings used to think that our planet was the normal one.

Ann
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