Birth Of An Unsual Planetary System Video

This artist's animation shows a brown dwarf surrounded by a swirling disk of planet-building dust. NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope spotted such a disc around a surprisingly low-mass brown dwarf, or "failed star." The brown dwarf, called OTS 44, is only 15 times the size of Jupiter, making it the smallest brown dwarf known to host a planet-forming, or protoplanetary disk.

Astronomers believe that this unusual system will eventually spawn planets. If so, they speculate that OTS 44's disk has enough mass to make one small gas giant and a few Earth-sized rocky planets.

OTS 44 is about 2 million years old. At this relatively young age, brown dwarfs are warm and appear reddish in color. With age, they grow cooler and darker.

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle (SSC)

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Author: djxatlanta; Uploaded: Nov 8, 2009; Duration: 0:16; Views: 112

Tags: exoplanet  circumstellar disk  brown dwarf  spitzer space telescope  infrared astronomy  unusual unusual wedding dresses unusual jobs unusual words unusual boys names unusual christmas gifts unusual facts unusual names unusual gifts unusual baby names


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