Verified by vibration
![Verified by vibration](https://science.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/pressenotiz_20130729_1_vgaWeb2.jpg?w=4096&format=jpeg)
July 28, 2013
Credit | Image courtesy of MPI for Solar System Research/Mark A. Garlick (www.markgarlick.com) |
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A team of scientists have for the first time unambiguously measured the internal rotation of a Sun-like star and determined the inclination of its rotation axis. The results also prove that the body known to accompany the star is indeed an exoplanet and not - as previously argued - a small companion star called a brown dwarf. This is the first time that asteroseismology, the study of a star's internal oscillations, has been used to constrain the mass of an orbiting companion of a Sun-like star.