Stellar Physics
Brown Dwarf
Failed stars — too small for hydrogen fusion, between gas giants and stars
A brown dwarf is a substellar object — too massive to be a planet but too small to be a star. Mass range: 13-80 Jupiter masses. Cannot sustain hydrogen fusion (M < 80 M_J). Fusion of deuterium (M > 13 M_J) for ~10 Myr. Cool — surface temperatures 250-2500 K. Emit infrared. Diversity discovered late 1990s (Gliese 229B, 1995). Confirmed: many in galaxy. Spectral classes: M, L, T, Y (cooler than stars). Difficult to detect — IR observations needed. Important: bridge between planets and stars.
- Mass range~13-80 Jupiter masses
- Surface temperature250-2500 K (cool)
- Spectral classesM, L, T, Y (cooler than M stars)
- Hydrogen fusionInsufficient mass
- Deuterium fusionBrief (~10 Myr) for M > 13 M_J
- First confirmedGliese 229B, 1995
Interactive visualization
Press play, or step through manually. The visualization is yours to drive — try it before reading on.
Watch the 60-second explainer
A condensed visual walkthrough — narrated, captioned, under a minute.
Why brown dwarfs matter
- Stellar diversity. Bridge between planets and stars.
- Galactic mass. Significant population.
- Star formation. Lower mass extreme.
- Spectroscopy. Test atmospheric models.
- Exoplanet context. Comparison with gas giants.
- Initial mass function. Lower end.
- Atmospheric science. Cold atmospheric chemistry.
Common misconceptions
- Brown dwarfs are stars. Substellar; no sustained fusion.
- Brown dwarfs are planets. Different formation; more massive.
- Brown dwarfs are rare. ~100 billion in galaxy.
- Brown dwarfs are dark. Emit IR; some warm enough for visible.
- Brown dwarfs all similar. Diverse — M, L, T, Y classes.
- Brown dwarfs cool quickly. Slow cooling over Gyr.
Frequently asked questions
What's a brown dwarf?
Substellar object that doesn't sustain hydrogen fusion. Mass 13-80 Jupiter masses (0.013-0.08 M_sun). Below 13 M_J: not even deuterium fusion → planet. Above 80 M_J: hydrogen fusion → star. Brown dwarfs span 80%-99% of M dwarfs by mass. Fail to ignite hydrogen fusion sustainably.
How are they distinguished from planets and stars?
Mass: 13-80 M_J (brown dwarf); <13 M_J (planet); >80 M_J (star). Plus: formation history — brown dwarfs form from gas cloud collapse like stars; planets form in protoplanetary disks. Some objects ambiguous — depends on definitions used.
What's deuterium burning?
Brief fusion of deuterium (²H) to ³He at ~10⁶ K. Less mass needed than full hydrogen burning (proton-proton). Brown dwarfs M > 13 M_J do this for ~10⁷-10⁸ years. Then deuterium depleted. After that: pure cooling. Distinguishes brown dwarfs from planets (not generally enough mass for D burning).
How are they detected?
Infrared imaging — they're cool, emit primarily in IR. Sky surveys (Spitzer, WISE, 2MASS, IRTF). Many discovered around stars (companion brown dwarfs). Some in young clusters. Spectroscopy: distinct features (FeH, methane in cool ones). JWST advances brown dwarf studies.
What's special about coolest brown dwarfs?
Class T: <1300 K, methane absorption dominant. Class Y: <500 K, even cooler — atmospheric chemistry like Jupiter. Some Y dwarfs ~250 K — colder than Earth's surface. Difficult to observe; few known. Smallest ones approach planetary properties.
How many exist?
Estimated ~100 billion in galaxy (similar to stars). Less massive but more numerous. Many companions to stars. Some isolated. Hard to detect; many likely undetected. Statistically, brown dwarfs make up substantial fraction of total population.
Could brown dwarfs harbor life?
Cool surfaces; possible "habitable zones" close to brown dwarf. Different from M dwarfs. Intense flaring may be problematic. Some atmospheres have water clouds. Astrobiology candidate but complex. Different from terrestrial life paradigm. Future studies needed.