below and to the right of the lowest part of the main sequence
No Brown Dwarfs are too small to be considerred a star.
The gravitational pull of a brown dwarf system would be weaker than that of a star system but stronger than that of a planet. It is sufficient to keep the system objects in orbit around the brown dwarf.
Assuming that the question refers not to a falled (??) star but to a failed star, the answer is that it is a star that does not have enough mass for hydrogen fusion to be sustain. Such stars are also known as brown dwarf stars.Assuming that the question refers not to a falled (??) star but to a failed star, the answer is that it is a star that does not have enough mass for hydrogen fusion to be sustain. Such stars are also known as brown dwarf stars.Assuming that the question refers not to a falled (??) star but to a failed star, the answer is that it is a star that does not have enough mass for hydrogen fusion to be sustain. Such stars are also known as brown dwarf stars.Assuming that the question refers not to a falled (??) star but to a failed star, the answer is that it is a star that does not have enough mass for hydrogen fusion to be sustain. Such stars are also known as brown dwarf stars.
No, Betelgeuse is not a dwarf planet. Betelgeuse is a supergiant star located in the constellation of Orion. It is one of the largest and most luminous stars known in our galaxy.
A small star that only gives off faint light and is relatively cool is likely a red dwarf star. These stars are much smaller and cooler than our Sun, but they are the most common type of star in the universe. Despite their dim appearance, red dwarfs can be very long-lived.
No. A brown dwarf is a star that has too low a mass to start nuclear fusion. A black dwarf is a former white dwarf, the remnant of a low to medium mass star that ran out of fuel in its core.
The death star is known as the nemesis star AKA the death star, brown dwarf star, red dwarf star, or the sun's twin.
That's called a brown dwarf.
Yes, a brown dwarf is a star that failed to ignite hydrogen fusion because it did not have enough mass for a strong enough gravitational collapse. Brown dwarf stars glow dimly with residual heat for a very short time.
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
No Brown Dwarfs are too small to be considerred a star.
A brown dwarf would qualify.
False. A brown dwarf is a failed star that cannot sustain nuclear fusion. When a star explodes it will leav behind either a neutron star or a black hole depending on its mass.
A protostar is a star the is developing as is on the way to starting nuclear fusion. A brown dwarf is a failed star, one that failed to gather enough mass to start fusion.
A brown dwarf is a "failed star" - one that never became hot enough (not enough mass) to start nuclear fusion.A brown dwarf is a "failed star" - one that never became hot enough (not enough mass) to start nuclear fusion.A brown dwarf is a "failed star" - one that never became hot enough (not enough mass) to start nuclear fusion.A brown dwarf is a "failed star" - one that never became hot enough (not enough mass) to start nuclear fusion.
In order of smallest mass.PlanetBrown DwarfNeutron Star
Eventually yes it could but only a special star know as a Brown Dwarf