Old Brown Dwarf-like Stars Discovered
8 February 2001
Astronomers using the UK Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) in Hawaii have
discovered two examples of a kind of star never previously
observed. These small, cool stars look superficially like brown dwarfs
but are actually the remnants of ordinary stars that have been
whittled down to cool Jupiter-sized bodies over billions of years by
spilling material over to a white dwarf companion star.
Dr Steve B. Howell, Head of the Astrophysics Group at the Planetary
Science Institute in Tucson, Arizona, was one of several astronomers
who predicted that stars of this kind would exist in such binary star
systems. Now Dr Howell, working with Dr David Ciardi of the University
of Florida and UKIRT staff scientists Chris Davis and Paul Hirst, has
secured the first direct evidence of such stars by taking infrared
spectra with the CGS4 instrument on UKIRT of two variable binary star
systems: LL Andromedae and EF Eridani. The results are to be
published in Astrophysical Journal Letters.
The observers took advantage of periods when the flow of material
between the two stars in these binary systems temporarily stops. At
these quiescent times, UKIRT can distinguish the radiation coming from
the cool donor star. In the case of LL Andromedae, the signature of
methane was detected at a wavelength of 2.2 microns. This shows that
the donor star's temperature is around 1,300 K (1000 degrees C),
similar to a 'T-type' methane brown dwarf. In EF Eridani, the donor
star is a little warmer at around 1,650 K (1,350 degrees C), similar
to an 'L-type' brown dwarf. According to theory, the estimated mass of
these cool stars is near four hundredths the mass of the Sun, or 40
times the mass of the planet Jupiter.
Assuming that they give out about the same amount of radiation as more
familiar young brown dwarfs, Howell estimates that both LL Andromedae
and EF Eridani are between about 100 and 130 light years away -
virtually neighbours of the solar system. To get a good feel for what
these binary stars are like, Howell says "Imagine the Earth is a white
dwarf star, which is about the same size as the Earth, and that
Jupiter is where the Moon is, orbiting around Earth every 80
minutes."
Artist's impressions of a similar cataclysmic binary system can be
found at http://www.psi.edu/~howell/cvbd_press_release.html
and may be reproduced with credit.
These newly discovered stars are probably about 8 billion years
old, as old as the Galaxy itself. Though as cool as brown dwarfs, and
similar to them in size and mass, Howell emphasises that their
structure and composition is likely to be different, and is not yet
known.
Brown dwarfs
Ordinary brown dwarfs are intermediate between stars and
planets. Often described as 'failed stars', they are more massive than
Jupiter, the largest planet in the solar system, but they fall short
of the minimum mass a true star needs - 8% of the Sun's mass. Stars
can shine constantly for billions of years because they generate
nuclear energy from the fusion of hydrogen into helium. But brown
dwarfs cannot sustain nuclear power production. After a modest initial
flush, they cool off and become progressively fainter.
Young brown dwarfs are now known to exist in the hundreds in the
Sun's neighbourhood. Their surface temperatures are less than about
3,500 K (3,200 degrees C). As the surface of a brown dwarf cools below
1,500 K, a dramatic chemical change takes place: large amounts of
methane form, considerably altering its appearance. The methane, or
'T-type', brown dwarfs are the coolest objects so far detected.
More about LL And and EF Eri
LL Andromedae is classified as a 'dwarf nova'. It is a binary star
system in which material flows from one star to the other. The two
members are a white dwarf primary, which receives material, and a cool
dwarf secondary, which acts as 'donor'. Material flowing from the
donor star forms a disc around the more massive white dwarf. Outbursts
take place from time to time when hot regions develop on this
accretion disc. The outbursts of LL Andromedae, which is a very old
system, are spaced by several years, or even decades. In younger dwarf
novae, outburst may occur much more frequently.
EF Eridani is classified as a 'polar'. Polars are similar to a dwarf
novae except that their white dwarfs are strongly magnetic. The
magnetic field prevents an accretion disc forming, Instead, material
from the donor star flows directly onto the magnetic poles of the
white dwarf. Though variable, polars do not have outbursts like dwarf
novae. They are sources of X-rays.
The UK Infrared Telescope
The world's largest telescope dedicated solely to infrared
astronomy, the 3.8-metre UK Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) is sited near
the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii, at an altitude of 4194 m above sea
level. It is owned by the United Kingdom Particle Physics and
Astronomy Research Council and operated along with the James Clerk
Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) by the staff of the Joint Astronomy Centre,
located in Hilo. UKIRT produces images and spectra in a key 1-5 micron
region of the electromagnetic spectrum for astronomy, covering
wavelengths between 1 and 5 microns. Wavelength coverage will shortly
be extended to the thermal infrared, at 10 and 20 microns. Further
examples of UKIRT data and images can be found on the UKIRT
image gallery.
Full paper
May be found at http://mentor.lanl.gov/abs/astro-ph/0101572
Contact details
Issued by:
Dr Jacqueline Mitton
RAS Press Officer
Phone: Cambridge +44 1223 564914
FAX: Cambridge +44 1223 572892
E-mail: jmitton@dial.pipex.com
RAS web: www.ras.org.uk
Contact for this release:
Dr Steve B. Howell
Astrophysics Group, Planetary Science Institute
620 N. 6th Ave., Tucson AZ 85705 US
Phone: +1 520 622-6300
Fax: +1 520 622-8060
e-mail: howell@psi.edu