Yes.
Teide 1 was the first brown dwarf to be verified in 1995. It is located in the Pleiades open star cluster and is approximately 400 light years from Earth
There are white dwarfs in every galaxy.
Brown dwarfs are more massive than the planet Jupiter.
The very smallest "stars" in the galaxy are brown dwarfs. These are starlike objects that have failed to produce sustained nuclear fusion.
Yes. Loads of them.
the color of most of the stars in our galaxy are white. They are concered white dwarfs
no
mostley lower-main stars and gases and dwarfs
True.
Dying stars eventually shrink into white dwarfs (which as they age eventually become red dwarfs and then brown dwarfs - but this takes an extremely long time).
No Brown Dwarfs are too small to be considerred a star.
According to astronomers and authors Jonathan Weiner and Carl Sagan, white dwarfs - which have been an accepted entities by all astronomers for decades - require an amount of time to "cool down" that well exceeds the current age of the universe - hence there hasn't been enough time for any of them to cool down yet and become "black dwarfs".
No. There are no known brown dwarfs in our general region of space and certainly none close enough to exert any noticeable tidal effects.