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'Alien Earth' is among eight new far-off planets | 'Alien Earth' is among eight new far-off planets |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Among eight new planets they have spied in distant solar systems, astronomers say one in particular has usurped the title of "most Earth-like alien world". | Among eight new planets they have spied in distant solar systems, astronomers say one in particular has usurped the title of "most Earth-like alien world". |
All eight were picked out by Nasa's Kepler space telescope, taking its tally of such "exoplanets" past 1,000. | All eight were picked out by Nasa's Kepler space telescope, taking its tally of such "exoplanets" past 1,000. |
But only three sit safely within the "habitable zone" of their host star - and one in particular is rocky, like Earth, as well as only slightly warmer. | But only three sit safely within the "habitable zone" of their host star - and one in particular is rocky, like Earth, as well as only slightly warmer. |
The find was revealed at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society. | The find was revealed at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society. |
Red sky | |
The three potentially habitable planets join Kepler's "hall of fame", which now boasts eight fascinating planetary prospects. | |
And researchers say the most Earth-like of the new arrivals, known as Kepler 438b, is probably even more similar to our home than Kepler 186f - which previously looked to be our most likely twin. | |
At 12% larger than Earth, the new claimant is bigger than 186f but it is closer to our temperature, probably receiving just 40% more heat from its sun than we do from ours. | |
So if we could stand on the surface of 438b it may well be warmer than here, according to Dr Doug Caldwell from the Seti (Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence) Institute in California. | |
"And it's around a cooler [red dwarf] star... so your sky would look redder than ours does to us," Dr Caldwell said. | |
That first-person encounter, however, is unlikely - both because the planet is 475 light years away and because we still have essentially no idea what it's made of. | |
Images from the Kepler telescope, which trails behind the Earth and peers far into the distance as we orbit our own sun, are used to identify far-off planets by observing "transits". | |
This refers to the dimming of a star's light when a planet passes in front of it. | |
A large team of researchers then uses additional data from earth-bound telescopes to further explore these unfamiliar solar systems. | |
They try to calculate how big the planets are, and how closely they orbit their host stars. | |
Not everything that causes such a dimming eventually turns out to be a planet, however. | |
At the same time as the eight confirmed new exoplanets were announced by a 26-strong team spanning Nasa and multiple US institutions, the Kepler mission's own scientists released another tranche of more than 500 "candidate" planets. | |
"With further observation, some of these candidates may turn out not to be planets," said Kepler Science Officer Fergal Mullally. | |
"Or as we understand their properties better they may move around in, or even outside, the habitable zone." | |
'Star Trek' scenario | |
Even once scientists have anointed a candidate as a confirmed exoplanet, the question of whether or not it is "Earth-like" is a fraught one, with fuzzy boundaries. | |
The size of the habitable or "Goldilocks" zone, where a planet is far enough from its sun to hold water but not so distant that it freezes, depends on how confident scientists want to be with their guess-work. | |
According to Dr Cardwell, just three of the eight new exoplanets can be confidently placed in that zone - and only two of those are probably rocky like the Earth. | |
More detailed description is very difficult. | |
"From the Kepler measurements and the other measurements we made, we don't know if these planets have oceans with fish and continents with trees," Dr Caldwell told BBC News. | |
"All we know is their size and the energy they're receiving from their star. | |
"So we can say: Well, they're of a size that they're likely to be rocky, and the energy they're getting is comparable to what the Earth is getting. | |
"As we fill in these gaps in our solar system that we don't have, we learn more about what it means to be Earth-like, in some sense." | |
Speaking at a related event at the conference, Prof Debra Fischer from Yale University said she remembered a time before the first exoplanet was discovered, more than two decades ago. | |
"I remember astronomers before that point being very worried," she said. | |
"We really had to step back and say: Maybe the Star Trek picture is wrong. That filled me with despair." | |
Prof Fischer said that sensitive telescopes like Kepler had ushered in an era of "amazing and impressive work". | |
"We're talking about a planet - and we can only see its star with a powerful telescope. | |
"And we can draw graphs and sketch its composition and have serious scientific discussions. This is incredible." | |
Follow Jonathan on Twitter. |