Star Cooler Than Venus Found 55
crossconnects writes to mention that Discovery is reporting that astronomers have found a nearby star with a mild surface temperature of 660 degrees fahrenheit. "The spectacularly unspectacular object is of special interest because it falls right smack in the middle of the final frontier that divides mega-planets from the puniest stars. Stars in that realm theoretically qualify as an entirely new stellar type -- what's called a Y class dwarf."
Not that hard (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Not that hard (Score:5, Funny)
After... (Score:1)
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Fry: Oh. What's it called now?
Professor Hubert Farnsworth: Urrectum.
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Venus just sits there, and greenhouse collects heat, while the Sun is essentially this ginormous H-bomb!
Come on, which is cooler? A bomb, or a passive collector of heat?
Publication at arXiv.org (Score:5, Informative)
http://arxiv.org/abs/0802.4387 [arxiv.org]
http://arxiv.org/pdf/0802.4387v2 [arxiv.org]
Nuclear fusion? (Score:5, Interesting)
Fascinating stuff indeed.
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Re:Nuclear fusion? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Nuclear fusion? (Score:4, Funny)
Perhaps it's using cold fusion? (ba dump dum)
Re:Nuclear fusion? (Score:5, Funny)
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Sigh, Bad English / Hmm - Biosphere? (Score:5, Interesting)
Aside from the bad English, the quoted bit is actually the most interesting part of the article. Does that mean that a particularly low-temp one of this newly discovered kind of dwarf star could be a self-contained biosphere, with a source of heat in the center surrounded by a life-sustaining atmosphere with liquid water in it?
Dyson Sphere is to Ringworld as Cool Dwarf is to Smoke Ring!
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But that wouldn't do anything to prevent using that image and caption. The image is of something bizarre, a red planet-looking thing with something spouting from the poles. It looks more like a candy in a clear plastic wrapper than an extra-cold star.
And the caption is even worse. Put a picture of a red candy with the caption "Ambiuguous Star", and I'm not thinking astronomy. I'm thinking Katamari. Royal Rainbow! [xkcd.com]
your anagram (Score:1)
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Just two of the things that would probably cause problems is that it is likely a very turbulent atmosphere when compared to that of Earth, and of course, there is also the likely high amount of radiation that is bouncing around (it is a star after all).
If we are thinking DNA/RNA based life, the radiation involved wo
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So, you're saying it's a biosphere of roaches, then....?
Layne
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Brown dwarfs have been observed to produce X-rays and Gamma rays. So just because this one produces no visible light does not mean it isn't producing a large amount of high energy radiation.
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while the conditions woud be extreme, there is Earth life that lives in and around volcanic vents and there are bacteria that are resistant to radiation. If the surface is *only* 660C, there's not a lot of fusion going on and there's likely a very thick and dense shield between the barely fusing core and the surface, so life is not entirely out of the question.
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That is true, however I think it is important to note that the expectation is that life did not originate from the area surrounding those volcanic ve
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I'll certainly agree that the odds are truly miniscule and that if there is life there, it would be strange even compared to the extremophiles on Earth.
I suppose I'm speculating without expectation, sort of the way Niven liked to imagine very odd but habitable worlds.
If, indeed there are stars a couple hundred degrees cooler still, then it becomes more probable, but still with the problem of how would it evolve in the first place.
Your suggestion that a habitable band would be deeper in is a good one,
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Fahrenheit is much funner to say than Celsius, or *wretch* Centigrade.... those sound like crap.
J
Re:Fahrenheit (Score:4, Funny)
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The usefulness of Fahrenheit is how the range of 0 - 100 reflects weather temperatures people have experienced.
Temperatures beyond common experience are better expressed in Celsius.
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In a popular article, Celsius or Fahrenheit (depending on country) are probably expected and more understandable to a general audience.
Ideally, any good article would give the measurement or estimate in the original units first (and with the original degree of precision), followed by a conversion if needed for the expected audience.
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Re:Fahrenheit (Score:4, Funny)
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What, they should have used Rankine?
Well, in the context, it makes about as much sense as the Kelvin scale... an arbitrary step size with absolute zero being the zero point. Sounds sensible to me! Probably would be better than Celsius or Fahrenheit. Alas, Kelvin got there ten years earlier, so it's the Celsius scale's step size for the accepted absolute scale. Still a bit arbitrary. Perhaps we should come up with a new scale that encompasses absolute zero and a very well defined temperature that makes sense on an absolute/astronomical leve
Re:Fahrenheit (Score:4, Interesting)
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Since the volume of space at t=0 was zero, but the energy content was not, the temperature at t=0 is infinite. That isn't useful for determining a scale. Alternatively, if the energy content was zero, then the temperature is lim(x->0) x/x, which is 0. If energy is zero but vo
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It also assumes it's useful to go back to a t=0, assuming one exists. Theoretical m
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Okay, at time t= +e(psilon), wiseguy.
Of course, this quantity already goes by the name "Planck temperature", so we have a nice tidy number: 1.417 x10^32 Kelvin.
How are you going to make such a scale any less arbitrary than Kelvin scale
Well, any value on that scale gives a meaningful number in the sense that it expresses the portion of the maximum energy possible in this universe, with a well-behaved upper (100) and lower (0) b
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Plank's Temperature (Score:2)
Mater == energy, energy == matter, and enough of either in a small enough volume will collapse into a singularity.
So - if you want a possible temp scale, use 0K as starting point, Planck temperature at end, and add convenient subdivisions. But, rememb
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Room temperature is about 1/40 eV on this scale, or 25.3 meV. Water boils at 32.2 meV and freezes at 23.5 meV. Absolute zero is, of c
I'm one of Venus' best friends... (Score:3, Funny)