A NASA artist’s impression of Kepler-186f,
the first validated Earth-size planet to orbit a distant star in the
‘habitable zone’, referring to a range of distance from a star where
liquid water might pool on the planet's surface. – Reuters
The discovery, announced on Thursday, is the closest scientists have
come so far to finding a true Earth twin. The star is located about 500
light years away in the constellation
The star’s outermost planet, designated Kepler-186f, receives about
one-third the radiation from its parent star as Earth gets from the sun,
meaning that high noon on this world would be roughly akin to Earth an
hour before sunset, said astronomer Thomas Barclay, with
Same same but different: NASA's comparison of Earth and Kepler-186f in terms of size and positions from their respective stars.
The planet is the right distance from its host star for water – if
any exists – to be liquid on the surface, a condition that scientists
suspect is necessary for life.
“This planet is an Earth cousin, not an Earth twin,” said Barclay,
who is among a team of scientists reporting on the discovery in the
journal
Science this week.
NASA launched its
Kepler space telescope
in 2009 to search about 150,000 target stars for signs of any planets
passing by, or transiting, relative to the telescope’s point of view.
Kepler was sidelined by a positioning system failure last year.
Analysis of archived Kepler data continues. From Kepler’s
observational perch, a planet about the size and location of Earth
orbiting a sun-like star would blot out only about 80 to 100 photons out
of every million as it transits.
The pattern is repeated every 365 days and at least three transits
would be needed to rule out other possibilities, so the search takes
time.
“It’s very challenging to find Earth analogs,” Barclay said. “Most
candidates don’t pan out, but things change as we get more
measurements.”
Scientists don’t know anything about the atmosphere of Kepler-186f,
but it will be a target for future telescopes that can scan for
tell-tale chemicals that may be linked to life.
“This planet is in the
habitable zone, but that’s doesn’t mean it is habitable,” Barclay said.
So far, scientists have found nearly 1,800 planets beyond the solar system.
“The past year has seen a lot of progress in the search for
Earth-like planets. Kepler-168f is significant because it is the first
exoplanet that is the same temperature and is (almost) the same size as
Earth,” astronomer David Charbonneau, with the
Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics, wrote in an email.
“For me the impact is to prove that yes, such planets really do
exist,” Charbonneau said. “Now we can point to a star and say, “There
lies an Earth-like planet.’” – Reuters
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