Failed Stars & Super-Jupiters
All About Space|Issue 113
The strange celestial objects that don’t make the cut as either planets or stars
Failed Stars & Super-Jupiters

The brown dwarf is seen as a stellar failure, a dropout from the school of star formation. These gigantic objects, with their puffy, gaseous outer layers, are the universe’s students that didn’t quite make the grade. In brown dwarfs, nuclear fusion – the process that gives stars their power – has given up the ghost, leaving them relatively cold, with some no hotter than the human body. Neither planet nor star, brown dwarfs fall into the grey area between the most massive gas giant planets like Jupiter – hence why they’re known as ‘super-Jupiters’, because of their massive, gaseous nature – and the smallest stars. Their existence blurs the lines between what is a planet and what is a star, forcing us to question the differences between how planets and stars form.

Stars form when clouds of molecular gas collapse under gravity and condense until the pressure and temperature at the center of the cloud is so great that nuclear fusion reactions – which turn nuclei of the element hydrogen into heavier helium nuclei – ignite. This kind of top-down formation is one of the key differences between how stars and planets form. Meanwhile, the worlds of our Solar System and many others that astronomers have been studying over the past 25 years form through a bottom-up process, where a core gradually builds up, becoming bigger and bigger. For the most massive planets, the core has enough gravity to begin stealing gas from the proto-stellar nebula around it, and this is where gas giants such as Jupiter and Saturn got their hefty atmospheres.

Esta historia es de la edición Issue 113 de All About Space.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.

Esta historia es de la edición Issue 113 de All About Space.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE ALL ABOUT SPACEVer todo
"We knew that this would be a historic comet"
All About Space UK

"We knew that this would be a historic comet"

Astronomer David Levy was immortalised for his co-discovery of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 – its impact with Jupiter 29 years ago held the world in awe

time-read
8 minutos  |
Issue 145
CELESTRON STARSENSE EXPLORER DX 102AZ
All About Space UK

CELESTRON STARSENSE EXPLORER DX 102AZ

Innovative technology provides the simplest and quickest solution yet to finding objects to observe, and this instrument will be very popular with beginners

time-read
7 minutos  |
Issue 146
MOON TOUR - COPERNICUS
All About Space UK

MOON TOUR - COPERNICUS

Get up close to the ‘Monarch of the Moon’

time-read
3 minutos  |
Issue 146
A HUNGRY BLACK HOLE 'SWITCHES ON' AS ASTRONOMERS WATCH IN SURPRISE
All About Space UK

A HUNGRY BLACK HOLE 'SWITCHES ON' AS ASTRONOMERS WATCH IN SURPRISE

J221951 is one of the most extreme examples yet

time-read
3 minutos  |
Issue 146
MYSTERIES OF THE UNIVERSE - WHY DOES JUPITER CHANGE COLOUR?
All About Space UK

MYSTERIES OF THE UNIVERSE - WHY DOES JUPITER CHANGE COLOUR?

For years, scientists have tried to work out why Jupiter’s bands frequently move and change colour. Now they believe they’ve found the answer

time-read
7 minutos  |
Issue 146
MARS HELICOPTER PHONES HOME AFTER A 63-DAY SILENCE
All About Space UK

MARS HELICOPTER PHONES HOME AFTER A 63-DAY SILENCE

Rugged terrain had kept Ingenuity from communicating with its robotic partner, the Perseverance rover

time-read
1 min  |
Issue 146
SIX OF THE BEST SPACE PRANKS
All About Space UK

SIX OF THE BEST SPACE PRANKS

It turns out that the sky isn’t the limit when it comes to a good old-fashioned practical joke

time-read
4 minutos  |
Issue 146
CLIMATES CHANGE IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM
All About Space UK

CLIMATES CHANGE IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM

Alongside Earth, our planetary neighbourhood is changing. But not for the better…

time-read
8 minutos  |
Issue 146
TIME APPEARED TO MOVE FIVE TIMES SLOWER IN THE FIRST BILLION YEARS AFTER THE BIG BANG
All About Space UK

TIME APPEARED TO MOVE FIVE TIMES SLOWER IN THE FIRST BILLION YEARS AFTER THE BIG BANG

Time dilation, brought about by the relativistic expansion of space, has resulted in the observed slowing of ‘clocks’ in the early universe

time-read
3 minutos  |
Issue 146
WHAT CAN WE DO WITH A CAPTURED ASTEROID?
All About Space UK

WHAT CAN WE DO WITH A CAPTURED ASTEROID?

Asteroids could provide us with rare resources

time-read
2 minutos  |
Issue 146