Kepler 22-b: Earth-like planet confirmed
From The BBC
5 December 2011
Astronomers have confirmed the existence of an Earth-like
planet in the "habitable zone" around a star not unlike our own. The
planet, Kepler 22-b, lies about 600 light-years away and is about 2.4 times the
size of Earth, and has a temperature of about 22C. It is the closest confirmed
planet yet to one like ours - an "Earth 2.0". However, the team does
not yet know if Kepler 22-b is made mostly of rock, gas
or liquid.
During the conference at which the result was announced, the
Kepler team also said that it had spotted some 1,094 new candidate planets -
nearly doubling the telescope's haul of potential far-flung worlds. Kepler 22-b
was one of 54 exoplanet candidates in habitable zones reported by the Kepler
team in February, and is just the first to be formally confirmed using other
telescopes. More of these "Earth 2.0" candidates are likely to be
confirmed in the near future, though a redefinition of the habitable zone's boundaries
has brought that number down to 48. Ten of those are Earth-sized.
The Kepler space telescope was designed to look at a fixed
swathe of the night sky, staring intently at about 150,000 stars. The telescope
is sensitive enough to see when a planet passes in front of its host star,
dimming the star's light by a minuscule amount. Kepler identifies these slight changes in starlight as
candidate planets, which are then confirmed by further observations by Kepler
and other telescopes in orbit and on Earth. Kepler 22-b lies 15% closer to its
sun than the Earth is to our Sun, and its year takes about 290 days. However,
the planet's host star puts out about 25% less light, keeping the planet at its
balmy temperature that would support the existence of liquid water. The Kepler team had to wait for three passes of the
planet before upping its status from ‘candidate’ to ‘confirmed’.
"Fortune smiled upon us with the detection of this
planet," said William Borucki, Kepler principal investigator at Nasa's Ames Research
Center . "The first
transit was captured just three days after we declared the spacecraft
operationally ready. We witnessed the defining third transit over the 2010
holiday season." The results were announced at the Kepler telescope's
first science conference, alongside the staggering number of new candidate
planets. The total number of candidates spotted by the telescope is now 2,326 -
of which 207 are approximately Earth-sized. In total, the results suggest that
planets ranging from Earth-sized to about four times Earth's size - so-called
"super-Earths" - may be more common than previously thought. As
candidates for planets similar to Earth are confirmed, the Search for
Extraterrestrial Intelligence (Seti) has a narrower focus for its ongoing hunt.
"This is a superb opportunity for Seti observations," said Jill
Tarter, the director of the Center for Seti Research at the Seti Institute.
"For the first time, we can point our telescopes at stars, and know that
those stars actually host planetary systems - including at least one that
begins to approximate an Earth analogue in the habitable zone around its host
star.
[Brilliant news! Let’s hope that SETI is pointing their
radio telescopes at that sucker right now…… Who knows what they pick up….?]
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