Webb Telescope Unveils Intense Weather on Brown Dwarfs

The James Webb Space Telescope has captured detailed weather reports on two brown dwarfs, celestial bodies that are bigger than planets but smaller than stars. These nearby brown dwarfs, located about six light-years from Earth, experience extreme temperatures and swirling toxic chemicals, with silicate particle clouds comparable to Saharan dust storms.


Devdiscourse News Desk | Updated: 16-07-2024 18:30 IST | Created: 16-07-2024 18:30 IST
Webb Telescope Unveils Intense Weather on Brown Dwarfs
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The James Webb Space Telescope has provided an unprecedented weather report for two nearby brown dwarfs. Celestial bodies larger than planets but smaller than stars, these brown dwarfs exhibit extreme atmospheric conditions.

Researchers detected blazingly high temperatures and toxic chemicals swirling in their atmospheres, alongside clouds of silicate particles blowing around like Saharan dust storms. The pair of brown dwarfs orbit each other approximately six light years from Earth.

The findings underline the telescope's potential for uncovering detailed cosmic weather patterns, offering new insights into the atmospheric dynamics of such celestial objects. A light-year, for context, is the distance light travels in a year, roughly 5.9 trillion miles or 9.5 trillion kilometers.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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