Jul 31, 2015 By: admin
Dr. Aaron Golden, research associate professor of mathematical sciences at ¿Û¿Û´«Ã½, is among a team of astronomers who have reported the direct detection of the radiant display of colors in the night sky called "Aurora borealis" - otherwise known as "the Northern Lights" - on another world, according to an published today in Nature.
Using the largest and most sophisticated optical and radio telescopes, the international team of researchers from the United States, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Germany, Russia, and Bulgaria confirmed the presence of aurora 10,000 times more powerful than what we experience on Earth above the polar regions of a brown dwarf known as LSR J1835+3259, located some 18 light years away in the constellation Lyra.
What makes this result so remarkable is that by conventional wisdom, brown dwarfs, which are only slightly larger than the planet Jupiter, should be inert objects with insufficient mass to support the kind of internal nuclear reactions that are responsible for these aurora. Consequently, they should barely glow in the night sky and have simply faded away as they radiated away the heat generated during their initial creation out of swirling clouds of gas and dust.
An artist's concept of brilliant auroras on the brown dwarf LSR J1835+3259, a misfit failed star about 18.5 light-years from Earth. The auroras are the first ever detected beyond our own solar system.Credit: Chuck Carter and Gregg Hallinan/Caltech