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2MASS J1534+1219
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Star 2MASS J1534+1219

Brown dwarf 2MASS J1534+1219 is located 65 light years away from the Sun. It is a single star of spectral class L3, that has typically about 4 % of solar mass. For now, there are no known exoplanets in this star system.
Sun distance
65 light years

2MASS J1534+1219

Spectral class: L3

Location +

Ascension iconRight ascension: 15h 34m 53.463s
Declination iconDeclination: 12° 19' 48.797'' (equatorial region)
Parallax iconParallax: 50.083
Distance iconSun distance: 65.124 ly | 20 pc
Star position
The position of a star tells us where it appears in the sky, similar to how we use coordinates like latitude and longitude on Earth. In astronomy, the three main coordinates are right ascension, declination and distance. .. icon More about Star position in StellarGuide

Basic characteristic

radius icon
Size: 10 % R Sun
| 1.1 R Jupiter
(estimate)
+
Star size
Radius of the star 2MASS J1534+1219 is not known. Its estimated value based on other similar stars is about 10 % solar radii.

The size of a star refers to its radius — the distance from its center to its surface. Star size is usually measured in solar radii (R☉), where 1 solar radius equals approximately 696,000 kilometers. Depending on their type and life stage, stars can be much smaller or larger than the Sun... icon More about Star size in StellarGuide

Photometry

Absolute stellar magnitude in different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum from infrared (K band) to ultraviolet (U band).
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
K
2.1
H
1.6
J
1.2
Grp
0.8
I
0.8
G
0.6
V
0.5
Gbp
0.5
B
0.4
U
0.3
More about 2MASS J1534+1219
       2MASS J1534+1219 can be found in northern celestial hemisphere, however it is too dim to be seen with the naked eye or even a small telescope. 
Other designations of this star
2MASS J15345325+1219495, Gaia DR3 1193465794018333824
External sources
simbad icon
Simbad database (2MASS J15345325+1219495)
Astronomical database SIMBAD (the Set of Identifications, Measurements and Bibliography for Astronomical Data)
gaia icon
Gaia database (Gaia DR3 1193465794018333824)
Archive from the Gaia mission
Class of stars Brown dwarf
Brown dwarfs are not really stars, because there is no thermonuclear fusion in their core. These objects are smaller and cooler than stars, but too massive to be considered planets.
Closest stars

G 137-24
- 2.4 ly

DO 3744
- 6.3 ly

BD+11 2874
- 6.4 ly

LSPM J1557+0901
- 7.8 ly

HD 136923
- 8.2 ly
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