بلغات أخرى
- البنغاليّة: কৌণিক বিভেদন
- الألمانيّة: Auflösungsvermögen
- الإنجليزيّة: Angular Resolution
- الإسبانيّة: Resolución Angular
- الفرنسيّة: Résolution angulaire
- الإيطاليّة: Risoluzione angolare
- اليابانيّة: 角分解能 (رابط خارجي)
- النيبالية: कोणीय विभेदन
- البرتغاليّة البرازيليّة: Resolução angular
- الصينيّة المبسطة: 角分辨率
- الصينيّة التقليدية: 角分辨率
وسائط ذات صلة
A binary brown dwarf system revealed
الشرح: This image presents a nearby system of brown dwarfs, objects that fall between planets and stars in mass and do not sustain long-term nuclear fusion in their cores. Located about 6.5 light-years from Earth, this system (known as Luhman 16) is the third closest system to the Solar System after the Alpha Centauri system and Barnard's Star. It was initially observed as what seemed to be a single faint source of infrared light. Brown dwarfs are often difficult to study because of their low brightness, especially in visible light. However they shine brighter in infrared light due to their cooler effective temperatures.
The comparison highlights the importance of observational resolution. The image at the center, taken by NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), shows the system as a single blurred object due to its lower resolution (WISE has a resolution of roughly 6 arcseconds). A highlighted zoomed-in view from the Gemini South Observatory in Chile reveals that this “single” source is actually a binary system of two brown dwarfs. The improved angular resolution (roughly 0.6 arcseconds) allows astronomers to separate the two objects clearly, demonstrating how higher-resolution observations uncover hidden structures in the universe. While the Gemini telescope is situated on the Earth and thus is affected by the blurring effects of the Earth's atmosphere, it has a substantially larger mirror than the WISE telescope (8m wide vs. 40cm wide) meaning it can achieve much higher resolutions.
المصدر: NASA/JPL/Gemini Observatory/AURA/NSF
رابط المصدر
License: PD الملكية العامة أيقونات



