New Objects within 20 light-years |
|
|
| Home | Stars | Habitability | Life | |
NASA -- larger image
Many of these new nearby objects are
extremely dim red dwarfs -- like Gliese
623 A (M2.5V) and B (M5.8Ve) at lower
right -- or brown dwarfs like
LP 944-20.
Latest News
On June 17, 2010, a team of astronomers submitted a preprint on a relatively bright, methane brown dwarf that was recently found to be a nearby object. Classed as spectral type T6 and designated as DENIS J081730.0-61552 (or DENIS 0817 or DEN 0817-6155), the substellar object appears to be located only 16 +/-1 light-years from Sol, making it the third closest, isolated brown dwarf found as of June 2010. The object was found by "cross-matching the DENIS and 2MASS point-source catalogs" (Artigau et al, 2010).

WISE,
UC-Boulder,
CalTech,
JPL,
NASA
Larger
composite
image.
DENIS 0817 is a relatively
bright, methane dwarf located
only around 16 light-years
away
(more).
On April 2, 2010, a team of astronomers (including Phillip W. Lucas, Chris G. Tinney, Ben Burningham, Sandra K. Leggett, David J. Pinfield, Richard L. Smart, Hugh R.A. Jones, Federico Marocco, Robert J. Barber, Sergei N. Yurchenko, Jonathan Tennyson, Miki Ishii, Motohide Tamura, Avril C. Day-Jones, and Andrew Adamson) posted a pre-print on this newly found object after analyzing data observed by the UKIDSS Galactic Plane Survey (UGPS), which were obtained using the United Kingdom Infra-Red Telescope (UKIRT) in Hawaii. Designated UGPS J072227.51-054031.2 (or UGPS J0722-05 or UGPS 0722-05), this extremely dim celestial object may be one of the closest known solitary brown dwarfs to Sol at present, based on an updated distance estimate of around 13 +/- 2 light-years (4.1 +0.6/-0.5 parsecs) away from Sol (Ken Croswell, New Scientist, June 24, 2010; and Lucas et al, 2010) -- made after an initial estimate of as close as 9.5 +/- 1.3 light-years away. As this object was found in observations from only six percent of the sky, many more such objects are expected to be found as more data from the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) or the recently launched NASA Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) satellite are analyzed (Lucas et al, 2010; Ken Croswell, New Scientist, April 9, 2010 and June 24, 2010; and David Matson, Scientific American Blog, April 9, 2010).
Lucas et al, 2010;
UKIDSS GPS,
UKIRT
Larger image set.
UGPS 0722-05 is invisible to the unaided
Human eye in Earth's night sky but can be
detected using infrared telescopes
(more).
On December 9, 2008, a team of astronomers announced their determination that an extremely cool and dim, methane brown dwarf (designated since discovery in 1999 as 2MASS J09393548-2448279) may be composed of a pair of roughly equal sized objects. After three years of precise measurements with the Anglo-Australian Observatory in Australia, the hypothesized binary was determined to be located around 17 light-years away in Constellation Antlia. Both components of the T8 brown dwarf binary pair appear to be fairly cool with a surface temperature of only 565 to 635 degrees Kelvin (560 to 680 degrees Fahrenheit) but are twice as bright as other brown dwarfs of its temperature. Each object probably has around 30 to 40 Jupiter-masses (Spitzer press release; Rachel Courtland, New Scientist, December 10, 2008; Burgasser et al, 2008; Leggett et al, 2007; and Tinney et al, 2005).

Unknown Artist,
SSC,
JPL,
CalTech,
NASA
Larger illustration.
The nearby methane brown dwarf
2MASS J09393548-2448279 is
probably a binary system of
similarly sized objects
(more).
On November 14, 2006, a team of astronomers associated with the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory Parallax Investigation (CTIOPI), a research program of the the Research Consortium on Nearby Stars (RECONS), announced their identification of 20 new stars located within 10 parsecs (pc), or 32.6 light-years (ly), of Sol (NOAO press release; and Henry et al, 2006b). This was an update of a July 2006 announcement (Henry et al, 2006a). While some stars were added to the 10-pc list, other stars and brown dwarfs were found to be farther away than previously measured. One red dwarf star was added to the list of stars within 20 ly. While some stars were added to the 10-pc list, other stars and brown dwarfs were found to be farther away than previously measured.
On August 1, 2006, astronomers (led by Edgardo Costa and Rene Mendez of the Universidad de Chile in Santiago) announced that an extremely dim M8.5 red dwarf should be reclassified as the closest known "L-type" brown dwarf in the Solar neighborhood. Originally discovered in 1999 by in images collected by the Deep Near-Infrared Survey (DENIS), the object was designated as DENIS or DEN 0255-4700, Located around 16.2 light-years (4.97 parsecs) from Sol in Constellation Eridanus (02:55:3.7-47:00:52, 2000), the substellar object is 100 million times dimmer than the Sun with a spectral type of L7.5 V, indicative of a cool object with a surface temperature of only 2,600 degrees F (1700 K). Spectral analysis of the object indicated that it has exotic elements such as potassium, rubidium, and cesium in its outer atmosphere, as well as superheated water (NOAO press release). RECONS has provided a preliminary mass estimate of 0.07 Solar-mass.
©
European
Southern
Observatory
Larger
illustration.
A cool methane
brown dwarf has
been discovered
around the recently
discovered, nearby
red dwarf star SCR
1845-6357
(more).
On March 22, 2006, a team of astronomers (including Beth Biller, Laird Close, Markus Kasper, Wolfgang Brandner, and Stephan Kellner) using the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope announced the detection of a cool methane brown dwarf (spectral type "T" 5.5 +/- 1) in orbit around the recently discovered, red dwarf star SCR 1845-6357 (ESO press release; and Biller et al, 2006). The object has between nine and 65 Jupiter-masses and a mean orbital distance of about 4.5 AUs from SCR 1845-6357, which was most recently estimated to be located only 12.6 +/- 0.1 light-years from Sol (Henry et al, 2006b; and Henry et al, 2006a). As of March 2006, SCR 1845-6357 may the 36th closest known star to Sol, while its brown dwarf companion "b" is the third closest known brown dwarf.
In late 2004, astronomers (Niall Deacon, Nigel Hambly, and John Cooke of the University of Edinburgh) analyzing data from the Southern Infrared Proper Motion Survey announced the discovery of an extremely dim red dwarf star (M8 V), designated SIPS 1259-4336, that may be located only 11.8 +/- 1.8 light-years from Sol (Deacon et al, 2005). Given its atypical faintness, however, astronomer Todd Henry (Georgia State University and RECONS) suggests that the star may be actually be farther away, although probably located within 5 parsecs or 16.3 light-years (Ken Croswell, 2004). The star's discoverers proposed that the star's dimness could be explained if it was actually an unresolved double star. In February 2005, astronomer Todd Henry reported that RECONS was able to revise the measurement of the star's visual magnitude to 18.0, about a magnitude brighter than originally estimated (Ken Croswell, 2005). According to an email from Todd Henry of RECONS to Tom Whiting in 2008, a more precise but unpublished parallax found the star to be 25.8 +/- 0.2 ly from Sol, but still within 10 parsecs.
New Nearby Objects
In addition to recently discovered red dwarfs (DENIS 1048-39 and Teegarden's Star) and brown dwarfs (Epsilon Indi ba and bb, Gliese 570 d and LP 944-20) listed in the Notable Nearby Stars page, preliminary distance estimates for the following celestial objects indicate that they also may be located within 20 ly of Sol, even if their physical characteristics are no longer considered to be unusual among nearby stars.
| Catalogue Designation | Spectral &
Luminosity Type | Preliminary
Distance (light-years) | More Information | ||||||
| Red Dwarfs | |||||||||
| SO 02353+1652 | M6.5-78.0 V | 12.5 +/- 0.1 | (Henry et al, 2006b; and Henry et al, 2006a) | ||||||
| SCR 1845-6357 | M8.5 V | 12.6 +/- 0.1 | brown dwarf companion (Henry et al, 2006b; Henry et al, 2006a; ESO press release; Biller et al, 2006; Subasavage et al, 2004; Deacon et al, 2004; and RECONS) | ||||||
| LHS 1723 | M4.5 V | 17.4 +/- 0.1 | variable (Henry et al, 2006b; Henry et al, 2006a; Subasavage et al, 2004; press release; and RECONS) | ||||||
| G 099-049 | M4.5 V | 17.6 +/- 1.0 | LTT 17897 (Henry et al, 2006b; and Henry et al, 2006a) | ||||||
| Brown Dwarfs | |||||||||
| SCR 1845-6357 b | T4.5-6.5 V | 12.6 +/- 0.7 | (Henry et al, 2006b; Henry et al, 2006a; ESO press release; and Biller et al, 2006) | ||||||
| UGPS 0722-05 | T10 V | 9.5 +/- 1.3 | UGPS J072227.51-054031.2, UGPS J0722-05 (Lucas et al, 2010) | ||||||
| DENIS / DEN 0817-6155 | T6 V | 16 +/- 1 | (Artigau et al, 2010) | ||||||
| DENIS / DEN 0255-4700 | L7.5 V | 16.2 +/- 0.3 | (NOAO press release) | ||||||
| 2MASS 1835+3259 | M8.5 V | 18.5 +/- 0.05 | (Reid et al, 2003; and RECONS) | ||||||
| 2MASS 0415-0935 | T8 V | 18.7 +/-0.3 | (USNO press release; and Liebert et al, 2002) | ||||||
| 2MASS 0937+2931 | T6 Vp | 20.0 +/- 0.5 | (Adam J. Burgasser, 2004; and Liebert et al, 2002) | ||||||
Updated d > 20 ly SIPS 1259-4336 | M8 V | 25.8 +/- 0.2 |
(Deacon
et al, 2005;
Ken Croswell, 2004;
and
unpublished
correspondence from Todd Henry)
| SSPM J1549-3544 | sdK5? | 400-600? |
(high-velocity, low-metallicty halo starScholz
et al, 2004; and
Farhi et al, 2005)
|
| |
Other Information
Up-to-date technical summaries on these stars may become available at: the Research Consortium on Nearby Stars (RECONS) list of the 100 Nearest Star Systems; and NASA's NStar Database.
For more information about stars including spectral and luminosity class codes, go to ChView's webpage on The Stars of the Milky Way.
© 2005-2010 Sol Company. All Rights Reserved. Note: Thanks to Rob Pierce for notifying us of updated information on both SIPS 1259-4336 and SSPM J1549-3544. |