A star the size of our Sun which is not the most common in the Milky Way. This is because stars smaller than the Sun are more common. These stars have many rocky planets. This is what interests scientists, and because of its light weight, it is likely that Earth-like planets will form in this system. Instead of forming in systems containing heavy stars. The researchers used MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument) to make these observations.
An international research team led by an astrophysicist from the University of Groningen in the Netherlands has recently detected 13 materials using Mid-Infrared Imaging (MIRI) equipment on the James Webb Space Telescope of NASA, the United States, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency. Hydrocarbons in the planet's dust disk. It formed around a newborn star called ISO-Chai 147. This star is 9 times lighter than our Sun and is about 625 light-years away from Earth (a light-year is the distance that light travels in one year, which is equal to 9.5 trillion kilometers). In the chameleon constellation.
Webb's observations indicate that the largest hydrocarbon molecule ever found is benzene (C6H6), but even more surprising was the discovery of ethane (C2H6), the first time ethane has been discovered outside our solar system. The research team revealed that ISO-Chai 147 is still in its early stages. It may eventually become a very low-mass star. It is called a red dwarf. The diameter of this star is about four times the diameter of Jupiter, while the diameter of the Sun is about 10 times larger than the diameter of Jupiter.
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