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Planetary nebulae are ejected from stars that are dying but are not massive enough to become supernovae namely, red giant stars.
Unlike major planets, these bodies are not massive enough to have swept up most smaller nearby bodies by gravitational attraction; they thus failed to grow larger.
Worse, while neutrinos are invisible enough to fit the bill, they are not massive enough, and therefore they don't clump together enough, so can only account for a tiny fraction of the total dark matter.
Another interesting effect stems from minihalos that are not massive enough to host star formation.
Furthermore, the stars are not massive enough to lose a considerable amount of matter in stellar winds, such that the triple is not affected dynamically by wind mass losses.
The stars, which are relatively small celestial objects made up of closely packed neutrons, are thought to form after a supernova explodes if the star is not massive enough to create a black hole.
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They just weren't massive enough to exert a gravitational influence that could clear their orbits of smaller, rocky debris – hence their status as dwarf planets.
Having signed over 150 new deals this year alone for its 20+ sports verticals (which will stream 2,500 live events in 2018), Austin-based FloSports has established itself as the go-to OTT partner for sports leagues with an established, passionate following that aren't massive enough to garner regular ESPN-level coverage.
Like a neutron star, it's the remnant of what was once an ordinary star, but not one massive enough to explode.
The unseen bodies could be other planets, dim companion stars or brown dwarfs -- small "failed" stars that were not quite massive enough to light up.
But at a diameter of only 530 kilometers, Vesta was not quite massive enough to pull itself back into a sphere after the Rheasilvia impact.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com