Planetar (astronomy)
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Planetar is a term used in astronomy that refers to one of two things:
- Brown dwarfs - objects intermediate in size between planets and stars.
- Interstellar planets - planetars that are cold masses smaller than brown dwarfs and do not orbit a star, but are free-floating in space.
Both definitions have been proposed, but neither has achieved wide usage in the astronomical and planetary science communities.
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[edit] Brown dwarf planetars
Planetars are planet-like objects that are more massive than the low-mass cut-off for brown dwarfs. These generally are referred to as brown dwarfs. However, a planetar is formed in the manner of planets, through accretion or core collapse from a circumstellar disc, and not through the collapse of a gas cloud. The distinction between a planetar and a brown dwarf is unclear, astronomers are divided into two camps as whether to consider the formation process of a planet as part of its division in classification. Such a planet might also be referred to as a hypergiant planet.[citation needed]
[edit] Red dwarf planetars
Hypothetically an ultra-giant planet may result from planetary formation large enough to become a red dwarf. Perhaps even larger stars may form from discs of gas of Population III protostars.[citation needed]
[edit] Unbound planet planetars
Interstellar planetary mass objects, also known as planetars, are called such, because a portion of the astronomy community defines a planet as something that must orbit a star. Any planetary-mass object which does not orbit a star, cannot according to that rule be called a planet. As it exists alone like a star, it is called a planet-star, or shorter planetar. In 2003, the IAU Extrasolar Planet Working Group recommended that these objects be called sub-brown dwarfs.
Some of these planemo harbour debris discs akin to proplyds. The planemo 2M1207b has been discovered to harbour a disc.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- arXiv: Infrared Spectroscopy of Substellar Objects in Orion P. W. Lucas, P. F. Roche, France Allard, Peter H. Hauschildt Mon, 14 May 2001 09:08:51 GMT (accessed: 25/08/2006)
- Royal Astronomical Society: FREE-FLOATING PLANETS CONFIRMED Thursday, 29 March 2001 (accessed: 25/08/2006)
- news@Nature.com (subscription required): Lonely planets float free Tom Clarke 04 Apr 2001 (accessed: 25/08/2006)
[edit] External links
- Strange New Worlds Could Make Miniature Solar Systems Robert Roy Britt (SPACE.com) 05 June 2006 11:35 am ET
- Working Group on Extrasolar Planets - Defintion of a "Planet" POSITION STATEMENT ON THE DEFINITION OF A "PLANET" (IAU) 2003