- #1
|Glitch|
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It has been my understanding that a brown dwarf was defined by when an object has achieved sufficient mass to begin deuterium fusion. Much like a star is defined by when it has achieved sufficient mass to begin hydrogen fusion. The minimum mass to begin fusing deuterium is estimated to be approximately 13 Jupiter masses. However, after reading a paper recently published in Astronomy & Astrophysics, it made references to "giant planets" (not brown dwarfs) with as much as 20 Jupiter masses. Therefore, I am left wondering how a giant gas planet can be greater than 13 Jupiter masses and not be of sufficient mass to begin the deuterium fusion process.
Or is it that once a brown dwarf has fused all of its deuterium it becomes a giant gas planet?
Source:
Observational evidence for two distinct giant planet populations - Astronomy & Astrophysics, Volume 603, July 2017 (free preprint)
Or is it that once a brown dwarf has fused all of its deuterium it becomes a giant gas planet?
Source:
Observational evidence for two distinct giant planet populations - Astronomy & Astrophysics, Volume 603, July 2017 (free preprint)