I know that larger mass stars form quicker, and lower mass stars form slower. Does this work for brown dwarfs? Would brown dwarfs take a very long time to form? If so, how long? I couldn't find anything online.
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3$\begingroup$ There is a difficulty in definition. The time it takes a star to form is the time from when the gas cloud start to collapse, until it reaches "Zero age" on the main sequence, when hydrogen fusion begins. But a brown dwarf never achieves hydrogen fusion, so in this sense it is always "forming". You could change your definition of "zero age", but then you are not comparing like with like. $\endgroup$– James KCommented May 13 at 5:11
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1$\begingroup$ Agree with JamesK, you need to define a point in the evolutionary sequence that is shared by both stars and brown dwarfs. Before nuclear fusion, both are just balls of gas and the Kelvin Helmholtz contraction timescale is longer for brown dwarfs. $\endgroup$– ProfRobCommented May 13 at 7:43
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$\begingroup$ Ahh, you're right, I hadn't thought of that. I could use the point when the star stops accreting, but that's just the PMS phase in real stars. Thanks for pointing that out $\endgroup$– AstrovisCommented May 13 at 23:48
1 Answer
Before protostars become "stars" and begin nuclear fusion, they are just balls of gas. Proto- brown dwarfs are also just balls of gas, but their cores never become hot enough for significant hydrogen ignition.
Roughly speaking, for a ball of gas, its contraction timescale is given by the amount of gravitational potential energy it has divided by the rate at which it loses energy from its surface.
The amount of potential energy energy depends on mass squared. The luminosity at the surface also depends indirectly on mass, but with a steeper dependence than the potential energy. This means that the contraction timescale is always longer for lower mass objects - roughly as $M^{-1}$ for low-mass objects.