"JWST Uncovers Unbelievably Tiny Brown Dwarf Defying Explanation"

TL;DR Summary
Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have studied a star cluster in the constellation Perseus to determine the smallest possible size for a star. The cluster, IC 348, was chosen because it is young and likely to have new brown dwarfs, which emit light from the fusion of deuterium. Using Webb and ground-based telescopes, astronomers identified three targets weighing between three to eight times Jupiter, with surface temperatures ranging from 830° to 1,500° degrees Celsius. The study of these small brown dwarfs has raised questions about their formation and the discovery of mysterious hydrocarbons.
Topics:science#astronomy#brown-dwarfs#formation-of-stars#infrared-light#james-webb-space-telescope#star-cluster
- Daily Telescope: How small can the smallest star be? Ars Technica
- James Webb Space Telescope spies record-breaking 'failed star' that shouldn't exist (video) Space.com
- NASA's Webb Identifies Tiniest Free-Floating Brown Dwarf NASA
- JWST Discovers Record-Breaking Brown Dwarf So Small It Defies Explanation ScienceAlert
- JWST Finds the Smallest Free-Floating Brown Dwarf Universe Today
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