Sunday, 18 January 2015
NASA telescope spies 3 new potentially habitable (and close) planets
NASA’s Kepler telescope has its eye on three new potentially habitable planets. At a distance of 150 light years, the three “lukewarm” bodies are among the closest candidates for habitable life.The star they orbit is known m as EPIC201367065. It’s an M-class dwarf about half the mass and size of our own Sun. It’s a little colder too. But at a trillion-and-a-half kilometers away (930,000,000 miles) it makes the top 10 list of our closest presumably habitable systems.One of the three planets discovered is particularly exciting to scientists, but the rest of our gadgets are still to do their analyzing and the discovery is then to be handed over to the Hubble telescope for a more intricate look."A thin atmosphere made of nitrogen and oxygen has allowed life to thrive on Earth. But nature is full of surprises. Many exoplanets discovered by the Kepler mission are enveloped by thick, hydrogen-rich atmospheres that are probably incompatible with life as we know it," Ian Crossfield of the University of Arizona, who lead the study, said of the January 6 discovery."Most planets we have found to date are scorched. This system is the closest star with lukewarm transiting planets," Erik Petigura, who discovered the planets while analyzing data NASA provided to astronomers, added.
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