James Webb Space Telescope finds 1st 'failed star' candidates beyond the Milky Way

At this point, astronomers are used to the James Webb Space Telescope pushing the boundaries of astronomy — so it is little surprise that the $10 billion telescope has surpassed itself again. 

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) — with a little help from the Hubble Space Telescope — may have found a family of so-called “failed star” brown dwarfs in the Milky Way’s satellite galaxy, the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). If this is the case, it will be the first time astronomers have spotted such bodies beyond the limits of our own galaxy.

The potential brown dwarfs are located at the edge of the SMC, a dwarf galaxy close to the Milky Way, in a young star cluster called NGC 602. NGC 602 is around 200,000 light-years from Earth. This star cluster is well-studied by astronomers because its thick clouds of dust and gas, the building blocks of stellar bodies, are believed to be sites of intense star formation. Star formation in this region of the SMC is further evidenced by an associated patch of ionized hydrogen, called N90. Atomic hydrogen is created when intense ultraviolet light from young stars strips electrons away from hydrogen atoms.

An illustration shows a brown dwarf “failed star” in the SMC staring out at the Milky Way. (Image credit: Robert Lea (created with Canva))

Also, because it has an under-abundance of elements heavier than hydrogen and helium (astronomers call these heavier elements “metals”), regions like NGC 602 and the wider SMC are good proxies for “metal-poor” galaxies found in the early universe.

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