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    Default Strange 'twin' new worlds found

    Strange 'twin' new worlds found
    BBC News ^ | 3 August 2006




    Strange 'twin' new worlds found


    A pair of strange new worlds that blur the boundaries between planets and stars have been discovered beyond our Solar System.

    A few dozen such objects have been identified in recent years but this is the first set of "twins".



    Dubbed "planemos", they circle each other rather than orbiting a star.

    Their existence challenges current theories about the formation of planets and stars, astronomers report in the journal Science.

    "This is a truly remarkable pair of twins - each having only about 1% the mass of our Sun," said Ray Jayawardhana of the University of Toronto, co-author of the Science paper.



    "Its mere existence is a surprise, and its origin and fate a bit of a mystery."



    'Double planet'


    The pair belongs to what some astronomers believe is a new class of planet-like objects floating through space; so-called planetary mass objects, or "planemos", which are not bound to stars.

    They appear to have been forged from a contracting gas cloud, in a similar way to stars, but are much too cool to be true stars.



    And while they have similar masses to many of the giant planets discovered beyond our Solar System (the largest weighs in at 14 times the mass of Jupiter and the other is about seven times more massive), they are not thought to be true planets either.



    "We are resisting the temptation to call it a 'double planet' because this pair probably didn't form the way that planets in our Solar System did," said co-researcher Valentin Ivanov of the European Southern Observatory (ESO) in Santiago, Chile.


    (Excerpt) Read more at news.bbc.co.uk ...
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    Super Moderator Malsua's Avatar
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    Default Re: Strange 'twin' new worlds found

    When they ultimately collide, I wonder if they will have enough mass to ignite.

    -Mal

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    Default Re: Strange 'twin' new worlds found

    Quote Originally Posted by Malsua
    When they ultimately collide, I wonder if they will have enough mass to ignite.

    -Mal
    Mal,

    The larger of the two is about 14 Jovian masses. That brings it just into the low end of the brown dwarf class. If it contains large amounts of deuterium then, yes, it could be fusing deuterium. If they collide and go to ~20 Jovian masses the resulting body would be well within the brown dwarf range.

    A brown dwarf isn't really a star. Its classed as a "failed star" - rather politically incorrect. It probably gives brown dwarves PTSD's and a nice SSI claim.

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    Super Moderator Malsua's Avatar
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    Default Re: Strange 'twin' new worlds found

    Aww, poor thing. Even with a partner it doesn't have enough gas to be a star.

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