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The majority of our focus for exoplanets have been around main sequence stars, understandably so. However, one place we have not looked very closely is for exoplanets around brown dwarfs (or would it be exomoons?). Brown dwarfs are not quite planets and not quite stars, so I am not certain whether to refer to an orbiting object around a brown dwarf as either a moon or a planet. For the purposes of this post, I will reference it as a "sub-dwarf companion."
Whatever the reference of such an object may be, it raises some interesting possibilities. For example, does a deuterium fusing brown dwarf generate solar winds? It is unlikely that such an object would produce solar flares, although it should still have a very strong magnetic field. In many respects brown dwarfs might be more conducive for life than red dwarf main sequence stars, given the right conditions.
Another consideration is the number of moons in our solar system. It would appear that the larger the planet, the more moons it is likely to have. Jupiter has ≈62 moons, therefore it is not unreasonable to presume that a brown dwarf might also have a large number of sub-dwarf companions.
Obviously one of those conditions has to be whether or not the sub-dwarf companion is within the habitable zone of the brown dwarf. The temperature and atmospheric pressure has to be within the triple point of water in order to have liquid water on its surface. Unfortunately Kopparapu et al. (2014) cannot be used because it depends upon luminosity of the main sequence star. However, the Stefan-Boltzmann Law can be used, if one factors in Albedo and radiative forcing.
It just so happens that there is a brown dwarf binary system only 1.9980 ± 0.0004 parsecs (6.516 ± 0.001 lightyears) from Sol - Luhman 16AB. Furthermore, there may be a sub-dwarf companion orbiting one of these two brown dwarfs. The mass given for Luhman 16A is between 0.04 and 0.05 M☉ (47 ± 5 MJ) with an effective surface temperature of 1,350°K. The mass given for Luhman 16B is between 0.03 and 0.05 M☉ (42 ± 10 MJ) with an effective surface temperature of 1,210°K. Given their size it is unlikely that either brown dwarf is fusing lithium. These binary brown dwarfs are separated by an estimated 3 AU.
Therefore, applying the Stefan-Boltzmann Law, and factoring in an Albedo of 30% and radiative forcing of +21.77°K, we get a habitable zone range of between 202,546 km and 532,442 km for Luhman 16A, and a habitable zone range between 144,635 km and 380,209 km for Luhman 16B.
Both habitable zones would seem to be extraordinarily close to their parent brown dwarf, and indeed most likely cause any sub-dwarf companion to be tidally locked. Any sub-dwarf companion would undoubtedly be influenced by the strong magnetic field of the brown dwarf as well, but unlikely to experience any loss of atmosphere due to solar flares or solar winds.
If anyone has any reason why such a scenario is not plausible, I would be interested in hearing from you.
Surface map of Luhman 16B recreated from VLT observations
Sources:
Habitable Zones Around Main-Sequence Stars: Dependence on Planetary Mass - The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Volume 787, Number 2, May 15, 2014 (free issue)
Resolved Near-Infrared Spectroscopy of WISE J104915.57-531906.1AB: A Flux-Reversal Binary at the L dwarf/T dwarf Transition - The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 772, Number 2, July 16, 2013 (free issue)
Possible astrometric discovery of a substellar companion to the closest binary brown dwarf system WISE J104915.57–531906.1 - Astronomy & Astrophysics, Volume 561, January 2014 (free issue)
On the Nearby Binary Brown Dwarf WISE J104915.57-531906.1 (Luhman 16) - arXiv 1303.5345
Whatever the reference of such an object may be, it raises some interesting possibilities. For example, does a deuterium fusing brown dwarf generate solar winds? It is unlikely that such an object would produce solar flares, although it should still have a very strong magnetic field. In many respects brown dwarfs might be more conducive for life than red dwarf main sequence stars, given the right conditions.
Another consideration is the number of moons in our solar system. It would appear that the larger the planet, the more moons it is likely to have. Jupiter has ≈62 moons, therefore it is not unreasonable to presume that a brown dwarf might also have a large number of sub-dwarf companions.
Obviously one of those conditions has to be whether or not the sub-dwarf companion is within the habitable zone of the brown dwarf. The temperature and atmospheric pressure has to be within the triple point of water in order to have liquid water on its surface. Unfortunately Kopparapu et al. (2014) cannot be used because it depends upon luminosity of the main sequence star. However, the Stefan-Boltzmann Law can be used, if one factors in Albedo and radiative forcing.
It just so happens that there is a brown dwarf binary system only 1.9980 ± 0.0004 parsecs (6.516 ± 0.001 lightyears) from Sol - Luhman 16AB. Furthermore, there may be a sub-dwarf companion orbiting one of these two brown dwarfs. The mass given for Luhman 16A is between 0.04 and 0.05 M☉ (47 ± 5 MJ) with an effective surface temperature of 1,350°K. The mass given for Luhman 16B is between 0.03 and 0.05 M☉ (42 ± 10 MJ) with an effective surface temperature of 1,210°K. Given their size it is unlikely that either brown dwarf is fusing lithium. These binary brown dwarfs are separated by an estimated 3 AU.
Therefore, applying the Stefan-Boltzmann Law, and factoring in an Albedo of 30% and radiative forcing of +21.77°K, we get a habitable zone range of between 202,546 km and 532,442 km for Luhman 16A, and a habitable zone range between 144,635 km and 380,209 km for Luhman 16B.
Both habitable zones would seem to be extraordinarily close to their parent brown dwarf, and indeed most likely cause any sub-dwarf companion to be tidally locked. Any sub-dwarf companion would undoubtedly be influenced by the strong magnetic field of the brown dwarf as well, but unlikely to experience any loss of atmosphere due to solar flares or solar winds.
If anyone has any reason why such a scenario is not plausible, I would be interested in hearing from you.
Surface map of Luhman 16B recreated from VLT observations
Sources:
Habitable Zones Around Main-Sequence Stars: Dependence on Planetary Mass - The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Volume 787, Number 2, May 15, 2014 (free issue)
Resolved Near-Infrared Spectroscopy of WISE J104915.57-531906.1AB: A Flux-Reversal Binary at the L dwarf/T dwarf Transition - The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 772, Number 2, July 16, 2013 (free issue)
Possible astrometric discovery of a substellar companion to the closest binary brown dwarf system WISE J104915.57–531906.1 - Astronomy & Astrophysics, Volume 561, January 2014 (free issue)
On the Nearby Binary Brown Dwarf WISE J104915.57-531906.1 (Luhman 16) - arXiv 1303.5345
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