Hubble Space Telescope discovers ‘failed stars’ are bad at relationships too

You have got to feel for brown dwarfs. Not only has their failure to ignite like normal stars earned them an unfortunate nickname — failed stars — but new findings from the Hubble Space Telescope have revealed they can’t even hold a relationship together.

Brown dwarfs are celestial objects that form when giant clouds of gas and dust, called molecular clouds, develop overly dense patches that collapse. Unlike your regular old star, however, a brown dwarf can’t quite gather enough material from the remains of that cloud to pile on enough mass and kickstart the fusion of hydrogen to helium in its core. A brown dwarf does fuse some elements, but the fusion of hydrogen to helium in particular is what defines a “main sequence” star — hence the “failed star” moniker.

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