TNPSC Thervupettagam

Helium-Rich Hot Subdwarf Stars

March 12 , 2024 258 days 330 0
  • A large international team of astronomers has discovered the smallest known star to date.
  • Also, it found that it is paired with another, somewhat larger star.
  • They burn helium at their cores and are typically found in galactic stellar groups.
  • This star is part of a binary system known as J0526 and is located approximately 2,760 light years from Earth.
  • The two stars are named J0526A, the larger unseen white dwarf; and J0526B, the hot subdwarf.
  • The smaller star is approximately seven times the size of Earth, which means it is smaller than Saturn.
  • It also has a surface temperature of approximately 2,226°C.
  • It orbits the larger star approximately every 20 minutes.
  • This means that it squeezes almost 72 years into just one Earth Day.
  • Before TMTS J0526B, one of the smallest stars ever observed was the red dwarf EBLM J0555-57Ab, located 600 light-years from Earth.

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