Most Earth-like exoplanet yet is discovered

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<font color="#FF0000">A small planet just seven or eight times as massive as the Earth has been found circling a nearby star. Astronomers say it is the most Earth-like world we have ever seen beyond our solar system.</font>

“For the first time, we are beginning to find our planetary kin among the stars,†says Geoff Marcy of the University of California at Berkeley, US. His team announced the discovery at a news conference in Arlington, Virginia, US, on Monday.

Over the past decade, astronomers have discovered about 150 extrasolar planets circling ordinary stars like the Sun. The vast majority have been gas giants larger than Jupiter.

In 2004, Marcy’s team reported discovering smaller Neptune-sized planets which were 18 to 25 times as massive as the Earth, while another team in Europe reported a Uranus-sized world about 14 times the mass of Earth.

But the new “super-Earth†is by far the smallest planet seen circling a commonplace star. The team discovered it while observing a star called Gliese 876 from the Keck Observatory in Hawaii. Gliese 876 is a red dwarf, one-third of the mass of the Sun, and lies just 15 light years away in the constellation Aquarius.

Two-day year
A slight “wobble†of the star had already revealed that it is being tugged by the gravity of two gas giants as they orbit around it with periods of 30 and 61 days.

But careful monitoring of the star over three years has now confirmed that there is also a small planet six to nine times as massive as the Earth whipping around the star every 1.94 days. Fly around Gliese 876 in this streaming movie (requires RealPlayer).

It might well be a rocky planet with a dense atmosphere. However, it is impossible to know for sure because no example planet of this mass exists in our own solar system. Its mass lies mid-way between that of Earth and Uranus – two very different worlds.

No life expectancy
“We actually have no direct information about the chemical or mineral composition of the planet, nor do we know if it’s primarily rocky, like Earth, or a combination of rock, ice and gas,†says Marcy.

But it is certain that the planet is swelteringly hot. It lies only about 3.2 million kilometres from its star – just 2% of the Earth-Sun distance – and its surface temperature must be higher than 200ºC. “Because the planet is in a two-day orbit, heated to oven-like temperatures, we do not expect life,†says Marcy’s colleague Paul Butler of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, US.

The team says the new planet is unlikely to remain a record-breaker for long. At the Keck Observatory, it is now possible to measure extremely subtle star wobbles, so even smaller planets should soon turn up. And space-based missions such as NASA’s Terrestrial Planet Finder, due for launch around 2014, should spot habitable Earth-like planets in droves.

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hmnm i saw aliens on discovery last week. hmm they were talking about going to this planet they named darwin 4 .. we would be reaching that planet in about 2042!! and they were taking about a similar yet a totally different life form there...
right from single cells to complex organisms...
so it would be thrilling to find life on another planet and it whould change our whole outlook towards life.... i didn`t see the whole episode.. but many scientists do say that there is definately life beyond earth and it won`t be long enough until we do discover it.. hmm nice...
 
Yup, would be cool if all countries on earth teamed up to fight one giant alien army on another planet........i'm watching too much movies... :no:
also people who say that there is no alien life are underestimating the size of the universe - their limited imagination is so ******* pathetic that they believe universe only exists to like a 1000 light years or something, and earth is the only planet supporting living organisms, and forgetting the fact that Universe is expanding even as we talk over 100000....(1000 0's)..00 light years. if you open your mind, you'd know.
 
how can you claim anything bout the universe.
U cannot predict its size and you cannot say that it is expanding. of course the knowledge is expanding buut thats all.
 
btw...how many planets in solar system have the scientists found out till now???
considering the universe is so big....there must be some living organisms somewhere....maybe some plants atleast.
 
AlbertPacino said:
But it is certain that the planet is swelteringly hot. It lies only about 3.2 million kilometres from its star – just 2% of the Earth-Sun distance – and its surface temperature must be higher than 200ºC. “Because the planet is in a two-day orbit, heated to oven-like temperatures, we do not expect life,†says Marcy’s colleague Paul Butler of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, US.

Aces170 said:
Well if it revolves once in 2 days, it might be really close to the star. Unlikely to find life out there.

Nice observation aces.... if only you had read that. :bleh:
 
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