NASA SURVEY SUGGESTS
EARTH-SIZED PLANETS ARE COMMON
From NASA
Oct. 28, 2010
All of the planets in the
study orbit close to their stars. The results show more small
planets than large ones, indicating small planets are more prevalent
in our Milky Way galaxy. "We studied planets of many masses -- like
counting boulders, rocks and pebbles in a canyon -- and found more rocks than
boulders, and more pebbles than rocks. Our ground-based technology can't see
the grains of sand, the Earth-size planets, but we can estimate their
numbers," said Andrew Howard of the University of California ,
Berkeley, lead author of the study. "Earth-size planets in our galaxy are
like grains of sand sprinkled on a beach -- they are everywhere," Howard
said. The study is in the Oct. 29 issue of the journal Science.
The research provides a tantalizing
clue that potentially habitable planets also could be
common. These hypothesized Earth-size worlds would orbit farther away
from their stars, where conditions could be favorable for life. NASA's
Kepler spacecraft also is surveying sun-like stars for planets
and is expected to find the first true Earth-like planets in the
next few years. Howard and his planet-hunting team, which includes principal investigator
Geoff Marcy, also of the University of
California , Berkeley , looked for planets within
80-light-years of Earth, using the radial velocity, or "wobble,"
technique.
They measured the numbers of
planets falling into five groups, ranging from 1,000 times the mass of
Earth, or about three times the mass of Jupiter, down to three times
the mass of Earth. The search was confined to planets orbiting
close to their stars -- within 0.25 astronomical units, or a
quarter of the distance between our sun and Earth.
A distinct trend jumped out
of the data: smaller planets outnumber larger ones. Only 1.6
percent of stars were found to host giant planets orbiting close in.
That includes the three highest-mass planet groups in the study,
or planets comparable to Saturn and Jupiter. About 6.5 percent
of stars were found to have intermediate-mass planets, with 10 to 30 times the
mass of Earth -- planets the size of Neptune and Uranus. And 11.8 percent had
the so-called "super-Earths," weighing in at only three to 10 times
the mass of Earth. "During planet formation, small bodies similar to
asteroids and comets stick together, eventually growing to Earth-size and
beyond. Not all of the planets grow large enough to become giant planets like
Saturn and Jupiter," Howard said. "It's natural for lots of these
building blocks, the small planets, to be left over in this process."
The astronomers extrapolated
from these survey data to estimate that 23 percent of sun-like stars
in our galaxy host even smaller planets, the Earth-sized ones,
orbiting in the hot zone close to a star. "This is the statistical fruit of
years of planet-hunting work," said Marcy. "The data tell
us that our galaxy, with its roughly 200 billion stars, has at least
46 billion Earth-size planets, and that's
not counting Earth-size
planets that orbit farther away from their stars in the habitable
zone." The findings challenge a key prediction of some theories of planet
formation. Models predict a planet "desert" in the hot-zone region
close to stars, or a drop in the numbers of planets with masses less than 30 times
that of Earth. This desert was thought to arise because most planets form in
the cool, outer region of solar systems, and only the giant planets were
thought to migrate in significant numbers into the hot inner region. The new
study finds a surplus of close-in, small planets where theories had predicted a
scarcity.
"We are at the cusp of
understanding the frequency of Earth-sized planets among planetary
systems in the solar neighborhood," said Mario R. Perez, Keck program
scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington . "This work is part of
a key NASA science program and will stimulate new theories to
explain the significance and impact of these findings."
1 comment:
CK said, "I hope that I’m still around the day that hits the headlines! -- Me too!
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