For the first time,
astronomers have detected water ice clouds, like the ones that shroud Earth,
around a dim celestial body outside of our solar system.
Scientists discovered evidence of the alien water ice
clouds in infrared images of a newly discovered brown dwarf that's as
cold as the North Pole.
"Ice clouds are predicted to be very important in the
atmospheres of planets beyond our solar system, but they've never been observed
outside of it before now," study leader Jacqueline Faherty, who is a
fellow at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, D.C., said in a statement.
Ice water has been found around gas giants in our solar system.
NASA's Cassini spacecraft recently detected water
ice crystals on Saturn that had
been churned up from deep inside the ringed planet's thick atmosphere during a
huge storm. Water ice clouds are also hidden underneath Jupiter's stormy
ammonia ice clouds.
Now, scientists found faint signatures of such clouds around the brown dwarf WISE
J085510.83-071442.5, or W0855 for short. The object is the coldest brown dwarf ever
observed by scientists. It lurks 7.2 light-years away from Earth and was first
seen by NASA's Wide-Field Infrared Explorer.
Brown dwarfs are often referred to as failed stars that resemble
planets. These objects start out as clouds of collapsing gas and dust much like
their main-sequence star cousins. But brown dwarfs never get hot enough for hydrogen fusion to start at the core,
and the close-packed stellar material reaches a stable state. Sometimes, these
objects are confused with freestanding planets because they look so much like
gas giants; many of them are even cold enough to maintain their own
atmospheres.
Faherty and colleagues used the FourStar near infrared camera at
Las Campanas Observatory in Chile to take 151 images of W0855 over three
nights. Scientists had previously predicted how thick water clouds around such
a chilly brown dwarf would scatter light. This telltale pattern was observed
around W0855. The team also detected evidence of sulfide ice clouds in the
atmosphere.
"This object is so faint and it's exciting to be the first
people to detect it with a telescope on the ground," study researcher
Chris Tinney, an astronomer at the Australian Centre for Astrobiology, at the
University of New South Wales, said in a statement.
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