[ This press release can also be found in the Western News] The origin of brown dwarfs is
one of the great unsolved mysteries facing astrophysicists today. In a new study published in The
Astrophysical Journal, Western’s Shantanu
Basu (at left) and University of Vienna’s Eduard Vorobyov (lower right) present a new model of
brown dwarf formation that unites the best parts of existing theories and has
far-reaching implications for understanding the population of low mass objects in
the universe. Brown dwarfs are astronomical
objects that have too little mass to be called stars and too much mass to be
called planets. Only a theoretical concept until discovered in the mid-1990s,
several hundred brown dwarfs have now been identified through infrared
telescopes and surveys. “There could be significant mass in the universe that is locked up in brown
dwarfs and contribute at least part of the budget for the universe’s missing
dark matter,” said Basu, a professor in Western’s Department of Physics and
Astronomy. “And the common idea that the first stars in the early universe were
only of very high mass may also need revision.” One leading theory suggests that brown dwarfs form like stars through the
direct collapse of low mass interstellar gas cloud fragments while another
speculates that they are formed after the collapse of more massive cloud
fragments yield multiple bodies including brown dwarfs that are ejected due to
the mutual interaction of the bodies. Both scenarios produce conceptual and
theoretical problems and are equally challenged and supported by scientists. Employing numerical hydrodynamic simulations – carried out in part by utilizing
the high performance computing capabilities of Western's SHARCNET – Basu and
Vorobyov show the evolution of the swirling nebular disc of gas around a newly
formed protostar (or a star that is still forming) is critical to brown dwarf
formation. Such a disc of gas has long been postulated to exist around the
early Sun and the planets in the Solar System are thought to have condensed out
of such a disc. In the study, Basu and Vorobyov prove that the early life of a disc is
characterized by the formation of multiple fragments that orbit the central
protostar and that the interaction of fragments leads to the ejection of some
brown dwarf fragments that have yet to fully form. The ejection speeds in this
mechanism are much lower than in a model where ejections occur only for fully
formed brown dwarfs and provide a more favorable comparison with observations
that show that brown dwarfs are present in close proximity to young stars.Astronomers Find Possible Secret of the Origin of Brown Dwarfs



