Thursday 8 December 2011

Habitable ‘super-Earth’ found

The most Earth-like planet ever discovered is orbiting a Sun-like star 600 light years away, every 290 days. US’s Nasa (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) said the Kepler space telescope confirmed its first-ever planet — Kepler-22b — in a habitable zone outside our solar system. It is 2.4 times the size of the Earth, putting it in a class known as “super-Earths”.
“We have now got good planet confirmation with Kepler-22b,” said Bill Borucki, Kepler principal investigator at Nasa Ames Research Center. “We are certain that it is in the habitable zone and if it has a surface, it ought to have a nice temperature,” he said.
Kepler-22b sits in its star’s so-called “habitable zone”, the region where liquid water could exist on the surface. Studies are on to determine if the planet is solid, like Earth,
or more gaseous like Neptune. If Kepler-22b has a surface and a cushion of atmosphere similar to Earth’s, its surface temperature would be about 22 degrees Celsius, about the same as a spring day in Earth’s temperate zone. AGENCIES Kepler uncovered 1,094 exoplanets.
We don’t know anything about the planets between Earth-size and Neptune-size because in our solar system we have no examples of such planets. We don’t know what fraction are going to be rocky, what fraction are going to be water worlds, what fraction are ice worlds. We have no idea until we measure one and see,” said San Jose State University astronomer Natalie Batalha, deputy science team lead for the Kepler Space Telescope that discovered the star.
The planet’s first “transit”, or star crossover, was captured shortly after Nasa launched its Kepler spacecraft in March 2009. French astronomers earlier this year confirmed the first rocky exoplanet to meet key requirements for sustaining life. But Kepler-22b is the first the US space agency has been able to confirm.
Confirmation means that astronomers have seen the planet crossing in front of its star three times. It doesn’t, however, mean that astronomers know whether life actually exists there, just that such planets have the right distance from their star to support water, plus a suitable temperature and atmosphere to support life.
Kepler is Nasa’s first mission in search of Earth-like planets orbiting suns similar to ours, and cost the US space agency about $600 million.
Nasa announced that Kepler has uncovered 1,094 more potential planets, twice the number it previously had been tracking. AGENCIES

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