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Brown Dwarf Companion to Epsilon Indi

silent lurker writes "A team of European astronomers has discovered a Brown Dwarf object (a 'failed' star) less than 12 light-years from the Sun. It is the nearest yet known. Now designated Epsilon Indi B, it is a companion to a well-known bright star in the southern sky, Epsilon Indi (now "Epsilon Indi A"), previously thought to be single. The binary system is one of the twenty nearest stellar systems to the Sun. ...and astronomers believe there might be as many as 12x as many brown dwarf stars as there are visible ones! Hmmmm... Lots o' juicy fodder for SF content creators, dontcha think? ...not to mention astronomers themselves. See press release from European Southern Observatory. Another item is from Science Daily."

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  1. Re:Astrophysics 101 by barakn · · Score: 4, Informative

    UKIRT has had a series of upgrades starting in about 1990, including several generations of IR imagers, the addition of active optics, etc.. Thus the modern version of UKIRT is not 23 years old. Nor is 23 years particularly old compared to the ~400 years that telescopic observations have been made. If you read the fine print, you'll note that it took collaborative observations by 5 different telescopes to merely confirm that brown dwarfs vary in brightness (differently at different colors). While it might confirm they have weather, it certainly does not "determine what kind of weather patterns their atmospheres have." A confirmed observation of a brown dwarf was not made until 1995 (reference).

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