A planet about 4,000 light years away could be what Earth will look like 5 billion years from now.
What many scientists hope to capture in habitable exoplanets has now appeared in a type of celestial body that is difficult to define.
Astronomers have announced the discovery of a brown dwarf star 332 light-years from Earth that could support planet formation.
Astronomers discovered the brown dwarf Luhman 16A surrounded by stable clouds in the atmosphere.
The light erupts as the white dwarf sucks matter from its nearby brown dwarf recorded by the Kepler Space Telescope.
Previous studies with Hubble, Spitzer and ALMA showed that brown dwarfs can be 70 times larger than giant stars like Jupiter.
Scientists have discovered the smallest star ever. The star is about the size of Saturn, smaller than Jupiter, with gravity 300 times stronger than Earth.
NASA astronomers discovered an ultra-cold planet with a mass similar to Earth and orbiting its star at the same distance as the Earth orbiting the Sun.
A new finding shows that the evolution and evolution of stars not only exist under a mandatory rule.
Water vapor and clouds are quite common forms of matter in a star outside the solar system. This is an important finding for astronomers.