Not just big stars, ancient dwarfs also have dust disk rings

A new finding shows that the evolution and evolution of stars not only exist under a mandatory rule.

Picture 1 of Not just big stars, ancient dwarfs also have dust disk rings
This dust block will collide over time, coalescing into stones and stones into stones.

Until now, many cosmological theories have pointed out that only large stars, large-sized planets and large masses have dusty gas disk rings that surround them from birth until mature. . However, this changed after ancient brown dwarfs were discovered.

It is known that these two brown dwarfs are small in size, mass, and only 1/13 - 1/18 times Jupiter and an estimated 45 million years old. But what is special is that they also have a disc-like structure similar to other giant sibling stars.

Researchers at the University of Montreal and the Carnegie Institute in Washington found that many low-mass dust blocks are in this ring of two dwarfs.

According to the conjecture, this dust mass will collide over time, coalesce into stones, stones into stones, and stones join together into blocks, along with energy, dust clouds prepare for the two dwarfs. This brown grows into a planet.