its cool how they actually look like a middle thing between stars & big planets
I like your presentations. No long intros with basic facts endlessly repeated, IMO. You get to the point, bringing unusual and current information. I gained some very good, new insights today by watching this video and I've been following the lastest astronomy news for decades. So congratulations. IMO, you are an inovator and deserve more viewership and success. (just an opinion from a noboby.)
It's really fascinating to think we are just starting to really expand our understanding of space
2:06 & 5:19 Do you have the texture of luhman A and the pink/red luhman B? I want them, if possible.
I've always found Brown Dwarfs to be fascinating. Great video!
Fascinating! I'm pretty sure very few people know about these neighbors of us.
I don't understand why you have less subscribers ?💔
what software do you use to navigate through space like that?
very interesting and easy to understand <3
great video mate, keep up the good work
3:25 class M stars are red dwarf stars, and thus are true stars that fuse light hydrogen into helium in a span of 1-10 trillion years.
That it might appear magenta, a color that doesn't actually exist as a singular color, seems interesting but unlikely.
M types are Stars that fuse Hydrogen (aka not a brown dwarf)
So wait luhman 16A is saturn sized And luhman 16B is same size as jupiter?
it was pefect thanks \
Maybe Jupiter will become brown dwarf, when our sun becomes white dwarf, It would be a brown dwarf orbiting a white dwarf system.
This could potentially change our understanding of gas giants?
Has any telescope ever gotten a disk on a star, any star? All these images of a brown dwarf are completely imaginary. In any telescope it's just a point of light.
If a red star can fuse hydrogen into deuterium isotopes, what kind of chemical creations are happening in Jupiter's atmosphere? Sure, there is stratification of denser/lighter elements, but the volatility of the planet's winds must stir up some fancy chemical solutions, I'd think.
@costrio