
On the question of what practical use brown dwarves (dwarfs?) could serve, here’s an unexpected answer: suns. Or at least hubs of planetary systems:
The construction site of a miniature solar system has been spotted but, unusually, its central star is a tiny brown dwarf. The star is so small it could be mistaken for a giant planet and it is surrounded by a disc of material chunky enough to form several planets the size of Earth or Mars.
There’s more. And here’s the really cool part:
What is more, these would-be planets could be habitable. The surface temperature of the mini brown dwarf is about 2000°C, which means that any planet 1.5 to 7 million kilometres away could maintain liquid water. The disc probably straddles this range.
So there could be warm, wet planets orbiting brown dwarves. And if there are, in fact, a lot of brown dwarves out there, they might be a good place to start looking for Earth-like planets.
But wouldn’t they be awfully dark?