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Pastor Dale Morgan  
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 More options Sep 21 2006, 6:03 am
From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2006 03:03:41 -0700
Local: Thurs, Sep 21 2006 6:03 am
Subject: Distorted solar system discovered
*Signs In The sun The Moon and the Stars

Distorted solar system discovered*

Posted 9/21/2006 10:37 AM ET

By Jeanna Bryner, SPACE.com

Discovered just 11 years ago, a class of oddball "failed stars"
continues to baffle as well as enlighten astronomers. Now researchers
have spotted for the first time one of these failed stars, called a
brown dwarf, with a companion planet — both orbiting a sun-like star.

"This is the first brown dwarf that has been directly imaged in an
extrasolar planetary system," lead researcher Kevin Luhman of Penn State
University told SPACE.com.

The finding, detailed in the current issue of The Astrophysical Journal,
sheds light on these mysterious objects that blur the lines between a
planet and a star.

Slow smoldering

Brown dwarfs are too small to trigger the fusion of hydrogen that keeps
stars like our sun shining for billions of years. Instead, with masses
up to 75 times that of Jupiter, brown dwarfs slowly cool and fizzle out
over tens of millions of years.

Located within the constellation Pisces, the newly spotted object is
called HD 3651 B. It is 50 times the mass of Jupiter and thus considered
a T brown dwarf — the coolest of the two brown-dwarf categories. This
slow smoldering releases infrared light, which was detected by NASA's
Spitzer Space Telescope.

One reason the dwarf stayed out of view until now, Lunham said, is its
lengthy distance from its planet partner, which the researchers spotted
using the Doppler method. This technique measures the wobbles of a star
caused by the gravitational tug of an orbiting object that otherwise
can't be detected.

However, the method is limited: Whereas the planet orbits at a snug 0.3
astronomical units (AU) from the Sun-like star called HD 3651, the brown
dwarf resides at a distance of 500 AU. One AU is the distance between
the sun and Earth.

Strange orbit

Luhman said due to the brown dwarf's prolonged orbit time of more than a
thousand years and its miniscule gravitational effect on the star,
Doppler was unable to pick up the object.

The discovery helps to clear up a quandary. When astronomers discovered
the system's Saturn-sized planet in 2003, they didn't know the cause of
its elongated, elliptical orbit. Now they suspect the tug from the brown
dwarf's gravity could be partly responsible for stretching the planet's
orbit.

"Other planets with elliptical orbits found around other stars with
Doppler observations may also have previously unseen, distant brown
dwarf companions that are perturbing their orbits," Luhman said.


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