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First X-ray from brown dwarf observed
Surprised scientists made provocative observations of an X-ray
flare from a celestial object called a brown dwarf - the first
ever seen from such an object - giving them strong hints of the
tangled magnetic fields that may exist inside, according to an
article to be published in the July issue of the Astrophysical
Journal Letters.
"We were most surprised by the fact that it was a flare," said
Lars Bildsten, co-author and professor of physics at the
Institute for Theoretical Physics at the University of
California, Santa Barbara. "At best we expected a few photons
every hour," said Bildsten. "Instead, we saw nothing for nine
hours and then a bright flare that lasted nearly two hours.
If the observation had been shorter, we would have nothing to
report."
"We were shocked," said Robert Rutledge, of the California
Institute of Technology in Pasadena, and lead author of the
paper. "We didn't expect to see flaring from such a lightweight
object. This is really the `mouse that roared.'"
This first X-ray flare ever seen from a brown dwarf, or failed
star, was detected by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, the
telescope that was launched nearly a year ago.
The bright X-ray flare has implications for understanding the
explosive activity and origin of magnetic fields of extremely low
mass stars, according to the team of four who made the
discovery."It was as if we were searching for a dim bulb and
instead found a bright flash of light," said Bildsten. "Less
massive than stars but more massive than planets, brown dwarfs
were long assumed to be rare," explained principal investigator
Gibor Basri in the April issue of Scientific American. "New sky
surveys, however, show that the objects may be as common as
stars."
Chandra detected no X-rays at all from the brown dwarf known as
"LP 944-20" for the first nine hours of a twelve hour
observation, then the source flared dramatically before it faded
away over the next two hours.
The energy emitted in the brown dwarf flare was comparable to a
small solar flare and is believed to come from a twisted magnetic
field.
"This is the strongest evidence yet that brown dwarfs and
possibly young giant planets have magnetic fields, and that a
large amount of energy can be released in a flare," said Eduardo
Martin, of Caltech, also a member of the team.
Professor Gibor Basri of the University of California, Berkeley,
the principal investigator for this observation, speculated that
"the flare could have its origin in the turbulent magnetized hot
material beneath the surface of the brown dwarf.
A sub-surface flare could heat the atmosphere, allowing currents
to flow and give rise to the X-ray flare - like a stroke of
lightning."
The brown dwarf, named LP 944-20, is about 500 million years old
and has a mass that is about 60 times that of Jupiter, or 6
percent of the sun's mass.
Its diameter is one-tenth that of the sun and has a rotation
period of less than five hours. Located in the constellation
Fornax in the southern skies, LP 944-20 is one of the best
studied brown dwarfs because it is only 16 light years from
Earth.
The researchers explained that the absence of X-rays from LP 944-
20 during the non-flaring period is in itself a significant
result.
It sets the lowest limit on steady X-ray power produced by a
brown dwarf, and shows that million degree Celsius upper
atmospheres, or coronas, cease to exist as the surface
temperature of a brown dwarf cools below about 2500 degrees
Celsius.
"This is an important confirmation of the trend that hot gas in
the atmospheres of lower mass stars is produced only in flares,"
said Bildsten.
Since brown dwarfs have too little mass to sustain significant
nuclear reactions in their cores, their primary source of energy
is the release of gravitational energy as they slowly contract -
at a rate of a few inches per year. They are very dim - one
hundredth of 1 percent as luminous as the sun - and of great
interest to astronomers because they are poorly understood and
probably a very common class of objects that are intermediate
between normal stars and giant planets.
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