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Why Neil deGrasse Tyson and Emily Rice Think You Should Pay Attention to Low-Mass Stars

2024-05-02 Science & Technology
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Description

Could we find life around low-mass stars? Neil deGrasse Tyson and comedian Chuck Nice find out why life might be more likely around low-mass stars, what makes brown dwarfs, galactic archeology, and more with astronomer Emily Rice. Where did the name “brown dwarf” come from? Learn about when brown dwarfs were first discovered and astronomer Jill Tarter’s research on them. We discuss star classification, why the letters are so out of order, and how brown dwarfs are relevant to the field of exoplanets. What is the difference between a brown dwarf and a low-mass star? Find out what the cutoff is for thermonuclear fusion and how deuterium can help low-mass stars fuse a little. What is the difference between a brown dwarf and a hot Jupiter? Do we know how brown dwarfs are formed? What is the largest dwarf star ever discovered? Learn about age-mass degeneracy and how low-mass brown dwarfs could actually be old high-mass brown dwarfs. Discover the Sun’s tachocline and how the brown dwarve’s magnetic field may operate differently. What happens when two brown dwarfs collide? What the heck is a blue straggler? Find out about the lifespan of brown dwarfs, galactic archeology, and metallicity. How do you tell the age of different low-mass stars? What would it take to capture a direct image of an exoplanet? We discuss the Trappist-1 System, the Goldilocks zone, and good candidates for Earth-like planets. Plus, a cosmic perspective on the importance of space exploration. Thanks to our Patrons Anthony Garcia, Matthew Carlson, mike kelly, Brett DiFrischia, Mary Clare V., Peter Ilvento, A dinosaur in dental school, Cedric Rashade Collins, 1874 Homestead, and Bob for supporting us this week. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can listen to this entire episode commercial-free. Check out our second channel, @StarTalkPlus Get the NEW StarTalk book, 'To Infinity and Beyond: A Journey of Cosmic Discovery' on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3PL0NFn Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/startalkradio FOLLOW or SUBSCRIBE to StarTalk: Twitter: http://twitter.com/startalkradio Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/StarTalk Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/startalk About StarTalk: Science meets pop culture on StarTalk! Astrophysicist & Hayden Planetarium director Neil deGrasse Tyson, his comic co-hosts, guest celebrities & scientists discuss astronomy, physics, and everything else about life in the universe. Keep Looking Up! #StarTalk #NeildeGrasseTyson 00:00 - Introduction: Emily Rice 3:49 - Why They’re Called Brown Dwarves 9:58 - Star Classification: OBAFGKM 13:42 - Brown Dwarves v. Stars v. Exoplanets 18:18 - Brown Dwarves v. Hot Jupiters 19:55 - Also How Are Low-Mass Stars Created? 22:38 - What is the Largest Dwarf Star Ever Discovered? 27:52 - Brown Dwarf Magnetic Field Mystery 34:23 - When Two Brown Dwarfs Collide 39:27 - The Lifespan of Low-Mass Stars 42:13 - Direct Images of Exoplanets 45:05 - Habitability Around Low Mass Stars 48:19 - A Cosmic Perspective

Top Comments (10)

@reverendriff5597 2024-05-02

Please consider doing LONGER episodes. Maybe an hour and a half or even 2 hours?

257 42 replies
@M_Alexander 2024-05-02

Star Talk is like "Come for the Neil, stay for the Chuck."

158 8 replies
@youngminds2384 2024-05-03

Please keep Chuck and his rudimentary approach. He represents a large percentage of your audience… us regular folks with little to no academic knowledge of the topics you cover; what we have is a ton of curiosity and passion to learn. Salute

98 4 replies
@StarTalk 2024-05-02

What other questions do you have for Emily?

64 44 replies
@Maria-ni4rc 2024-05-02

Thank you for having Emily Rice again. She definitely knows her stuff on low-mass Stars. Kudos Chuck, great imitation imitating the great Joan Rivers...

56 3 replies
@idiocracyBonanza 2024-05-03

Can you guys do 7,8 hours long episodes I can't get enough of your wisdom.

28 1 replies
@doglogicshow 2024-05-02

Emily has a great sense of humor.

21
@michaelcalder8431 2024-05-02

S;peaking of things of 50 years ago in astronomy - Sir Patrick Moore presented a weekly show on the BBC called 'The Sky At Night' for 50 years! So you have a lot of catching up to do. One of the most memorable statements I heard from him was that stars are too hot to burn. Beautiful.

9
@wlockuz4467 2024-05-12

Niel getting one-upped by Emily in the cosmically colorful clothing department is the most wholesome thing I've seen on this podcast.

6
@JiggyPiggy-z2f 2024-05-10

Science/comedy is a bridge for the gap between learning styles for ALL ages , cheers to you guys 👏

6

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