We may have discovered most Earth-like planet beyond our solar system
The futuristic movies of the past painted 2015 and beyond as a time of flying cars, hovercrafts and alien contact. While we may not be zooming down sky highways just yet, discovering life beyond Earth may not be outside our reach in the coming years. In fact, 2015 had barely begun when scientists at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics announced that they had discovered what they believe to be the most Earth-like planet ever found outside the solar system.
The Guardian reports that the planet, Kepler 438b, which orbits a
distant star in the constellation of Lyra, may be slightly larger than
the Earth. It circles an orange dwarf star that bathes it in 40 % more
heat than we receive from our sun. The small size of Kepler 438b makes
it likely to be a rocky world, while its proximity to its star puts it
in the so-called ‘Goldilocks’ or habitable zone where the temperature is
just right for liquid water to flow, according to the Guardian.
The newly-discovered world, which is 470 light years away, completes
an orbit around its star every 35 days, making a year pass 10 times as
fast as on Earth. And Kepler 438b is not alone. It is one among eight
new potentially habitable planets, including some close to Earth in size
and situation, which were announced at the recent meeting of meeting of
the American Astronomical Society. Speaking of the announcement,
Douglas Caldwell of the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California
noted to Science magazine, ‘We’ve significantly increased the list of
verified small planets in the habitable zone’.
One of the other planets on the new list also looks promising.
Kepler 442b lies in the same constellation 1 100 light years away. The
Guardian reports that it is about a third larger than Earth, receives
about two thirds as much starlight, and has a 60 % chance of being
rocky. According to Scientific American, both Kepler 438b and Kepler
442b may be somewhat warmer than Kepler's two previous premier rocky
worlds, Kepler 186 f and Kepler 62 f, each of which gets significantly
less starlight—similar to that received by Mars.
The research team used a statistical technique known as Blender to
confirm that the planets originally spotted by NASA’s ‘planet hunting’
Kepler space telescope were real. Science magazine elaborates,
‘[Blender] calculates what various false-positive objects would look
like and then compares them with the brightness curves of the Kepler
candidates, also incorporating any follow up data from other
observations. Starting with 12 Kepler candidates believed to be small
rocky worlds, the Blender analysis whittled them down to eight new
exoplanets with radiuses smaller than 2.7 times Earth’s, all believed to
be in the habitable zone.’
Although the newly-discovered planets show positive indicators for
habitability, study co-author David Kipping, an astronomer at the
Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, sounded a word of caution
in Scientific Amercian: ‘We can't say for sure whether these planets are
truly habitable—only that they are promising candidates for
habitability.’ He also noted to the Guardian that Kepler 438b and 442b
were ‘as close to Earth analogues as we’re going to find in the Kepler
data’.
So what’s next in the quest to find life beyond our world? The
Guardian believes that planet hunters’ hopes are now likely pinned on
the next generation of telescopes, including Hubble’s replacement, the
James Webb Space Telescope, and the European Extremely Large Telescope.
Scientific American meanwhile looks stateside to NASA's upcoming
Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or TESS, expected to launch in
2017. TESS would perform an all-sky survey focused on finding transiting
rocky planets around nearby stars.
The study will be published in The Astrophysical Journal.
published: 2015-01-26