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Kepler telescope discovers 100 Earth-sized planets | Kepler telescope discovers 100 Earth-sized planets |
(35 minutes later) | |
Nasa's Kepler telescope has discovered more than 100 Earth-sized planets orbiting alien stars. | Nasa's Kepler telescope has discovered more than 100 Earth-sized planets orbiting alien stars. |
It has also detected nine small planets within so-called habitable zones, where conditions are favourable for liquid water - and potentially life. | It has also detected nine small planets within so-called habitable zones, where conditions are favourable for liquid water - and potentially life. |
The finds are contained within a catalogue of 1,284 new planets detected by Kepler - which more than doubles the previous tally. | The finds are contained within a catalogue of 1,284 new planets detected by Kepler - which more than doubles the previous tally. |
Nasa said it was the biggest single announcement of new exoplanets. | Nasa said it was the biggest single announcement of new exoplanets. |
Space agency scientists discussed the new findings in a teleconference on Tuesday. | Space agency scientists discussed the new findings in a teleconference on Tuesday. |
Statistical analyses of Kepler's expanding sample of worlds help astronomers understand how common planets like our own might be. | |
Dr Natalie Batalha, Kepler mission scientist at Nasa's Ames Research Center in California, said calculations suggested there could be more than 10 billion potentially habitable planets in the Milky Way. | |
"About 24% of the stars harbour potentially habitable planets that are smaller than about 1.6 times the size of the Earth. That's a number that we like because it's below that size that we estimate planets are likely to be rocky," said Dr Batalha. | |
"If you ask yourself where is the next habitable planet likely to be, it's within about 11 light-years, which is very close." | |
Future observatories such as the James Webb Space Telescope could examine starlight filtered through the atmospheres of exoplanets for potential markers of biology. | |
"The ultimate goal of our search is to detect the light from a habitable exoplanet and analyse that light for gases like water vapour, oxygen, methane and carbon dioxide - gases that might indicate the presence of a biological ecosystem," said Paul Hertz, director of astrophysics at Nasa. | "The ultimate goal of our search is to detect the light from a habitable exoplanet and analyse that light for gases like water vapour, oxygen, methane and carbon dioxide - gases that might indicate the presence of a biological ecosystem," said Paul Hertz, director of astrophysics at Nasa. |
Of the telescope's finds to date, the planets Kepler-186f and Kepler-452b are arguably the most Earth-like in terms of properties such as their size, the temperature of their host star and the energy received from their star. | Of the telescope's finds to date, the planets Kepler-186f and Kepler-452b are arguably the most Earth-like in terms of properties such as their size, the temperature of their host star and the energy received from their star. |
Dr Batalha said the new finds Kepler 1638b and Kepler-1229b were intriguing targets in the search for habitable planets. | Dr Batalha said the new finds Kepler 1638b and Kepler-1229b were intriguing targets in the search for habitable planets. |
The Nasa Ames researcher said the Kepler mission was part of a "larger strategic goal of finding evidence of life beyond Earth: knowing whether we're alone or not, to know... how life manifests itself in the galaxy and what is the diversity". | |
She added: "Being able to look up to a point of light and being able to say: 'That star has a living world orbiting it.' I think that's very profound and answers questions about why we're here." | She added: "Being able to look up to a point of light and being able to say: 'That star has a living world orbiting it.' I think that's very profound and answers questions about why we're here." |
Dr Timothy Morton, from Princeton University in New Jersey, said the overwhelming majority of exoplanets found by Kepler fell into the super-Earth (1.2-1.9 times bigger than the radius of Earth) and sub-Neptune sized (1.9-3.1 times bigger than Earth's radius). | Dr Timothy Morton, from Princeton University in New Jersey, said the overwhelming majority of exoplanets found by Kepler fell into the super-Earth (1.2-1.9 times bigger than the radius of Earth) and sub-Neptune sized (1.9-3.1 times bigger than Earth's radius). |
He noted that planets in this size range had no known analogues in our Solar System. | He noted that planets in this size range had no known analogues in our Solar System. |
Scientists used a new statistical technique to validate the 1,284 new exoplanets from a pool of 4,302 targets from Kepler's July 2015 catalogue of planet candidates. The technique folded in different types of information about the candidates from simulations, giving the astronomers a reliability score for each potential new world. | |
Candidates with a reliability greater than 99% were designated as "validated planets". | Candidates with a reliability greater than 99% were designated as "validated planets". |
The team identified a further 1,327 candidates that are more likely than not to be planets, but do not meet the 99% threshold and will require further study. | The team identified a further 1,327 candidates that are more likely than not to be planets, but do not meet the 99% threshold and will require further study. |
Kepler employs the transit method to detect planets orbiting other stars. This involves measuring the slight dimming of a star's light when an orbiting planet passes between it and the Earth. | Kepler employs the transit method to detect planets orbiting other stars. This involves measuring the slight dimming of a star's light when an orbiting planet passes between it and the Earth. |
The same orbital phenomenon was involved when Mercury passed across the face of the Sun on Monday. | |
The Kepler telescope, named after the Renaissance astronomer Johannes Kepler, was launched on 7 March 2009. | The Kepler telescope, named after the Renaissance astronomer Johannes Kepler, was launched on 7 March 2009. |
In May 2013, the second of four reaction wheels - used to control a spacecraft's orientation - failed on Kepler. This robbed the orbiting observatory of its ability to stay pointed at a target without drifting off course. | In May 2013, the second of four reaction wheels - used to control a spacecraft's orientation - failed on Kepler. This robbed the orbiting observatory of its ability to stay pointed at a target without drifting off course. |
However, engineers came up with an innovative solution: using the pressure of sunlight to stabilise the spacecraft, allowing it to continue its planet hunt. The resulting mission was dubbed K2. | However, engineers came up with an innovative solution: using the pressure of sunlight to stabilise the spacecraft, allowing it to continue its planet hunt. The resulting mission was dubbed K2. |
Follow Paul on Twitter. | Follow Paul on Twitter. |