http://www.obspm.fr/encycl/2M1207.html
oups nouveau :/
merci
2M1207
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- Posts: 1386
- Joined: 06.06.2003
- With us: 21 years 6 months
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3644410.stm
Waitaminute... this could be a giant planet orbiting a Brown Dwarf?!
That confuses things... I thought BDs would only be able to have terrestrial bodies orbiting them (like the Galiean satellites, but rockier). Still, this is very interesting!
Waitaminute... this could be a giant planet orbiting a Brown Dwarf?!
That confuses things... I thought BDs would only be able to have terrestrial bodies orbiting them (like the Galiean satellites, but rockier). Still, this is very interesting!
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- Joined: 06.11.2003
- With us: 21 years 1 month
- Location: Notts, UK
According to the PDF file
http://www.sc.eso.org/%7Egchauvin/Gg222.pdf
...it appears at first sight a brown dwarf orbiting an object of spectral type M8. The object is quite young though and the paper says that young bright dwarves are brighter than the magnitude they eventually evolve into. All quite fascinating to an amateur like me...
http://www.sc.eso.org/%7Egchauvin/Gg222.pdf
...it appears at first sight a brown dwarf orbiting an object of spectral type M8. The object is quite young though and the paper says that young bright dwarves are brighter than the magnitude they eventually evolve into. All quite fascinating to an amateur like me...
Regards, Losty
Maxim,
They've used adaptive optics to produce spectrograms and images of two very faint objects. It's not reflected light, both objects are glowing faintly in infra-red wavelengths.
The resolution isn't good enough to show phases at that distance, just faint sources of near-infrared radiation. The picture is a "false color" combination of images in three different infra-red wavelengths.
See http://www.eso.org/outreach/press-rel/pr-2004/pr-23-04.html
for more details.
They've used adaptive optics to produce spectrograms and images of two very faint objects. It's not reflected light, both objects are glowing faintly in infra-red wavelengths.
The resolution isn't good enough to show phases at that distance, just faint sources of near-infrared radiation. The picture is a "false color" combination of images in three different infra-red wavelengths.
See http://www.eso.org/outreach/press-rel/pr-2004/pr-23-04.html
for more details.
Selden
For non-french speakers, this topic :
http://www.interstars.net/index.php?actu=441
can be translated via any internet translator.
'Hope it does !
http://www.interstars.net/index.php?actu=441
can be translated via any internet translator.
'Hope it does !
Et voilà !
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Topic authorsymaski62
- Posts: 610
- Joined: 01.05.2004
- Age: 41
- With us: 20 years 7 months
- Location: france, divion
http://www.obspm.fr/encycl/2M1207.html
Code: Select all
?????? "2MASSWJ1207334-393254" {
RA 12.125567 #12 07 33.4
Dec -39.539000 #-39 32 54
Distance 230 # 70 PC
SpectralType "M8"
Radius 98000
AppMag 13
}
Code: Select all
"b" "2MASSWJ1207334-393254" # 2M1207
# Star not present in Celestia's default stars.dat file.
{
Texture "gasgiant.*"
NightTexture "gasgiantnight.*"
Color [ 0.96 0.00 0.96 ]
Mass 1600 # M.sin(i) = 5 jupiters
Radius 98000
InfoURL "http://www.obspm.fr/encycl/2M1207.html"
EllipticalOrbit {
Period 2450
SemiMajorAxis 55
Eccentricity 0
ArgOfPericenter 0
MeanAnomaly 0
}
# likely to be in captured synchronous rotation
}
AltSurface "limit of knowledge" "2M1207/b"
{
Texture "extrasolar-lok.*"
}
windows 10 directX 12 version
celestia 1.7.0 64 bits
with a general handicap of 80% and it makes much d' efforts for the community and s' expimer, thank you d' to be understanding.
celestia 1.7.0 64 bits
with a general handicap of 80% and it makes much d' efforts for the community and s' expimer, thank you d' to be understanding.