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Consumed by Abdominal Distention

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Arthritis Care &Research, EarlyView.
Abimbola Fadairo‐Azinge   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source
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Searching for Low Mass Stars in the Halo

Astrophysics and Space Science, 1999
From microlensing events detected at high galactic latitude as well as from direct measurements of the halo stellar density, estimations of a potential contribution of low mass stars to the mass budget is questioned. Up to now no clear answer has been found for one main reason: the difficulty to observe them in a sufficient volume, which requires deep ...
A.C. Robin, M. Crézé, V. Mohan
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Low mass stars

Astrophysics and Space Science, 1994
Low mass stars contribute an important fraction to the mass of our Galaxy. Due to the faintness of these stars a direct investigation of their space distribution and kinematics can be carried out only in the immediate solar neighbourhood. This fact emphasizes the importance of the “Third Catalogue of Nearby Stars” (CNS3) as a probe of the stellar ...
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THE ORIGIN OF LOW MASS STARS

Origins of life and evolution of the biosphere, 1997
Recent evidence indicates that most low mass stars in the Galaxy (< 5 M [symbol: see text]) form alongside massive stars in clusters embedded in giant molecular clouds. Once their parental gas is removed, the fate of these clusters is to disperse and blend into the field population of the galactic disk.
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Very Low Mass Stars

Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics, 1987
Very low mass (VLM) stars, which we define here somewhat arbitrarily as those with masses ;$ 0.3 M 0' pose some of the more interesting problems in stellar astrophysics. The physics of their envelopes and atmospheres are more complicated and their structures less well modeled than their more massive counterparts.
James Liebert, Ronald G. Probst
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The Evolution of Low-Mass Stars

1995
We present evolutionary models for low-mass stars using the best currently available physics for the equation of state, the Rosseland mean opacities and the screening factors of thermonuclear reaction rates. We follow the evolution of stars of mass M ≤ 0. 6 M⊙ down to the hydrogen burning minimum mass, with initial metallicity Z=0, 10-3 and 0. 02.
I. Baraffe, G. Chabrier
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EVOLUTION OF STARS OF LOW MASS

Canadian Journal of Physics, 1967
Evolutionary sequences of models in the early and main sequence stages have been constructed for stars in the mass range [Formula: see text] with a composition X = 0.739, Z = 0.021. The general behavior of the evolutionary track in the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram is similar to that obtained for medium-mass stars.
Dilhan Ezer, A. G. W. Cameron
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Low-Mass Quark Stars

Astrophysics and Space Science, 2005
More and more observational hints of quark stars are proposed these years though pulsars are considered conventionally to be normal neutron stars. The existence of low-mass quark stars is a direct consequence of the possibility that pulsar-like stars are actually quark stars, because of the ability that quark matter can confine itself by color ...
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The Evolution of Low-Mass Stars

1992
At the end of core hydrogen burning low-mass stars develop a helium core where the electrons are degenerate. This occurs when the mass of this helium core is smaller than 0.31 M⊙. The upper boundary for this group of low-mass stars is not exactly determined; in fact it depends on the initial chemical composition of the stars and on the details of the ...
C. W. H. De Loore, C. Doom
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