by Miriam Kramer
'Earth's Cousin': Scientists Find Alien Planet That's Most Like Home
For the first time,
scientists have discovered an Earth-sized alien planet in the habitable
zone of its host star, an "Earth cousin" that just might have liquid
water and the right conditions for life.
The newfound
planet, called Kepler-186f, was first spotted by NASA's Kepler space
telescope and circles a dim red dwarf star about 490 light-years from
Earth. While the host star is dimmer than Earth's sun and the planet is
slightly bigger than Earth, the positioning of the alien world coupled
with its size suggests that Kepler-186f could have water on its surface,
scientists say. You can learn more about the amazing alien planet find in a video produced by Space.com.
"One
of the things we've been looking for is maybe an Earth twin, which is
an Earth-sized planet in the habitable zone of a sunlike star," Tom
Barclay, Kepler scientist and co-author of the new exoplanet research,
told Space.com. "This [Kepler-186f]
is an Earth-sized planet in the habitable zone of a cooler star. So,
while it's not an Earth twin, it is perhaps an Earth cousin. It has
similar characteristics, but a different parent." [9 Exoplanets That Could Host Alien Life]
Potentially habitable planet
Scientists
think that Kepler-186f — the outermost of five planets found to be
orbiting the star Kepler-186 — orbits at a distance of 32.5 million
miles (52.4 million kilometers), theoretically within the habitable zone
for a red dwarf.
Earth orbits
the sun from an average distance of about 93 million miles (150 million
km), but the sun is larger and brighter than the Kepler-186 star,
meaning that the sun's habitable zone begins farther out from the star
by comparison to Kepler-186.
This artist illustration shows what it might be like to stand on the surface of the planet Kepler-18 …
"This is the first
definitive Earth-sized planet found in the habitable zone around another
star," Elisa Quintana, of the SETI Institute and NASA's Ames Research
Center and the lead author of a new study detailing the findings, said
in a statement.
Other planets of various sizes have been found in the habitable zones
of their stars. However, Kepler-186f is the first alien planet this
close to Earth in size found orbiting in that potentially
life-supporting area of an extrasolar system, according to exoplanet
scientists.
'An historic discovery'
"This
is an historic discovery of the first truly Earth-sized planet found in
the habitable zone around its star," Geoff Marcy, an astronomer at the
University of California, Berkeley, who is unaffiliated with the
research, told Space.com via email. "This is the best case for a
habitable planet yet found. The results are absolutely rock-solid. The
planet itself may not be, but I'd bet my house on it. In any case, it's a
gem."
The newly discovered planet measures about 1.1 Earth radii, making it slightly larger than Earth,
but researchers still think the alien world may be rocky like Earth.
Researchers still aren't sure what Kepler-186f's atmosphere is made of, a
key element that could help scientists understand if the planet is
hospitable to life. [Kepler-186f: Earth-Size World Could Support Oceans, Maybe Life (Infographic)]
This diagram shows the position of Kepler-186f in relation to Earth.
"What we've learned, just
over the past few years, is that there is a definite transition which
occurs around about 1.5 Earth radii," Quintana said in a statement.
"What happens there is that for radii between 1.5 and 2 Earth radii, the
planet becomes massive enough that it starts to accumulate a very thick
hydrogen and helium atmosphere, so it starts to resemble the gas giants
of our solar system rather than anything else that we see as
terrestrial."
The edge of habitability
Kepler-186f
actually lies at the edge of the Kepler-186 star's habitable zone,
meaning that liquid water on the planet's surface could freeze,
according to study co-author Stephen Kane of San Francisco State
University.
Because of its
position in the outer part of the habitable zone, the planet's larger
size could actually help keep its water liquid, Kane said in a
statement. Since it is slightly bigger than Earth, Kepler-186f could
have a thicker atmosphere, which would insulate the planet and
potentially keep its water in liquid form, Kane added.
"It
[Kepler-186f] goes around its star over 130 days, but because its star
is a lower mass than our sun, the planet orbits slightly inner of where
Mercury orbits in our own solar system," Barclay said. "It's on the
cooler edge of the habitable zone. It's still well within it, but it
receives less energy than Earth receives. So, if you're on this planet
[Kepler-186f], the star would appear dimmer."
Exoplanet hunting in the future
Kepler-186f could be too dim for follow-up studies that would probe the planet's atmosphere. NASA's James Webb Space Telescope
— Hubble's successor, expected to launch to space in 2018 — is designed
to image planets around relatively nearby stars; however, the
Kepler-186 system might be too far off for the powerful telescope to
investigate, Barclay said.
Scientists using the Kepler telescope
discovered Kepler-186f using the transit method: When the planet moved
across the face of its star from the telescope's perspective, Kepler
recorded a slight dip in the star's brightness, allowing researchers to
learn more about the planet itself. Kepler suffered a major malfunction
last year and is no longer working in the same fashion, but scientists
are still going through the spacecraft's trove of data searching for new
alien worlds.
"I find it
simply awesome that we live in a time when finding potentially habitable
planets is common, and the method to find them is standardized," MIT
exoplanet hunter and astrophysicist Sara Seager, who is unaffiliated
with the research, told Space.com via email.
No comments:
Post a Comment