Monday, December 7, 2009

UniverseToday.com | NASA to Launch WISE (Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer) on Friday to look for asteroids and brown dwarfs close to home

Cave Editor's Note:
BROWN DWARF

CAUGHT MY EYE SINCE I AM JUST STUDYING SOMETHING FROM A SPANISH ASTRONOMER AND A POTENTIAL BROWN DWARF THAT IS OUR OWN SUN'S BINARY COMPANION OUT BY PLUTO!
(What might be causing the Sun to act weird magnetically)



NASA to Launch WISE on Friday to look for asteroids and brown dwarfs close to home
Universe Today

NASA is getting WISE to the Universe this Friday. That is, they're launching the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, a new infrared space telescope that will survey objects in our Solar System and beyond, looking for asteroids and brown dwarfs close to home, and protoplanetary disks and newborn stars far off.

WISE will also be sensitive enough to pick up brown dwarfs, objects that straddle the line between planet and star. Though they are massive, they don't quite make the cut for igniting nuclear fusion in their cores, but are warm enough to emit infrared light. It's thought that there are quite a few of these objects in our own back yard waiting to be discovered, and WISE may double or triple the amount of star-like objects that are within 25 light-years of the Earth.

Source: http://www.universetoday.com/2009/12/07/nasa-to-launch-wise-on-friday/


RELATED:


http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/091130-mm-baby-brown-dwarf.html

Clue Found to Origin of Cosmic Misfits

By SPACE.com staff

posted: 30 November 2009
09:42 am ET

A class of cosmic oddballs exists that doesn't fit in with either stars or planets, instead occupying a murky middle ground.


Known as brown dwarfs, these misfits fall somewhere between planets and stars in terms of their temperature and mass. They are cooler and more lightweight than stars and more massive (and normally warmer) than planets.


This has generated a debate among astronomers: Do brown dwarfs form like planets or like stars?


Scientists now have an additional clue – a baby brown dwarf was discovered by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope – that suggests brown dwarfs develop like light-weight stars.


Brown dwarf quandry


Brown dwarfs are born of the same dense, dusty clouds that spawn stars and planets. But while they may share the same galactic nursery, brown dwarfs are often called "failed" stars because they lack the mass of their hotter, brighter stellar siblings.


Without that mass, the gas at their core does not get hot enough to trigger the thermonuclear fusion that burns hydrogen — the main component of these molecular clouds — into helium. Unable to ignite as stars, brown dwarfs end up as cooler, less luminous objects that are more difficult to detect – a challenge that was overcome in this case by Spitzer's heat-sensitive infrared vision.


To complicate matters, young brown dwarfs evolve rapidly, making it difficult to catch them when they are first born.


The first brown dwarf was discovered in 1995, and while hundreds have been found since, astronomers had not been able to unambiguously find them in their earliest stages of formation until now.


Looking through cosmic dust


In this study, an international team of astronomers found a so-called "proto brown dwarf" while it was still hidden in its natal star-forming region. Guided by Spitzer data collected in 2005, they focused their search in the dark cloud Barnard 213, a region of the Taurus-Auriga complex well known to astronomers as a hunting ground for young cosmic objects.


"We decided to go several steps back in the process when (brown dwarfs) are really hidden," said David Barrado of the Centro de Astrobiologia in Madrid, Spain, lead author of the paper detailing the discovery in the Astronomy & Astrophysics journal. "During this step they would have an (opaque) envelope, a cocoon, and they would be easier to identify due to their strong infrared excesses. We have used this property to identify them. This is where Spitzer plays an important role because Spitzer can have a look inside these clouds."


Spitzer's longer-wavelength infrared camera penetrated the dusty natal cloud to observe a baby brown dwarf named SSTB213 J041757. The data, confirmed with near-infrared imaging from Calar Alto Observatory in Spain, revealed not one but two of what would potentially prove to be the faintest and coolest brown dwarfs ever observed. They're also the youngest, the astronomers think.


To pin down that the dusty envelope was in fact a celestial womb and that these dwarfs were in their infancy, Barrado and his team had them observed from around the world. The information gleaned from these observations helped the astronomers characterize the brown dwarfs and the environment around them.


"We were able to estimate that these two objects are the faintest and coolest discovered so far," Barrado said.


The observations suggest brown dwarfs form like low-mass stars. This theory is bolstered because the change in brightness of the objects at various wavelengths of light matches that of other very young, low-mass stars.


While further study will confirm whether these two celestial objects are in fact proto brown dwarfs, they are the best candidates so far, Barrado said.