Examples of using Brown dwarf in English and their translations into Swedish
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disc of gas and cosmic dust around a brown dwarf.
It orbits the brown dwarf at a distance 55 times larger than the Earth to the Sun,
or a dust-shrouded brown dwarf.
This image shows the brown dwarf ISO-Oph 102, or Rho-Oph 102, in the Rho Ophiuchi star-forming region.
The growth of cosmic dust grains in the disc around the brown dwarf ISO-Oph 102| ESO.
at a distance of 20.4 parsecs, the brown dwarf has a minimum physical separation of approximately 880 AU.
In 2004, a group of astronomers used the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope array in Chile to produce an image of 2M1207b, a companion to the brown dwarf 2M1207.
M1207b- first image of an exoplanet This composite image shows an exoplanet(the red spot on the lower left), orbiting the brown dwarf 2M1207 centre.
This video shows the first ever map of the weather on the surface of the nearest brown dwarf to Earth.
This artist's impression is based on the first ever map of the weather on the surface of the nearest brown dwarf to Earth.
ESO's Very Large Telescope has been used to create the first ever map of the weather on the surface of the nearest brown dwarf to Earth.
emitted by disc material warmed by the brown dwarf.
It zooms in to the Rho Ophiuchi star-forming region, to the brown dwarf ISO-Oph 102, or Rho-Oph 102.
This artist's impression shows these grains of cosmic dust in the disc around the brown dwarf.
January 2014: ESO's Very Large Telescope has been used to create the first ever map of the weather on the surface of the nearest brown dwarf to Earth.
Southern Observatory The growth of cosmic dust grains in the disc around the brown dwarf ISO-Oph 102.
In January 2003, astronomers announced the discovery of a brown dwarf with a mass of 40 to 60 Jupiter masses in orbit around ε Indi A at a distance of at least 1,500 AU.
masses(27 times the mass of Jupiter, probably a brown dwarf) and 3 astronomical units away from the bright primary.
Observatory Wide-field view of the sky around the nearby brown dwarf pair Luhman 16AB This wide-field view of part of the southern constellation of Vela is centred on the position of the brown dwarf pair Luhman 16AB.
has theorized that what they're seeing in the photographs that you refer to as an orange object is actually a Brown Dwarf, with the possibility of Nibiru being one of its moons.