Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Could This Be Earth's Near Twin?

Introducing Planet 55 Cancri f

Astronomers discover solar system 41 light years away with similarities to our own.

The Guardian reports:

The discovery of a giant alien world circling a distant star has led astronomers to believe they have located a near twin to our solar system in a far-flung corner of the galaxy. Nasa scientists confirmed the discovery last night in what is a hugely significant step towards finding a second Earth-like planet capable of harbouring extraterrestrial life.

The new planet is the fifth to be spotted orbiting a star that lies in the constellation of Cancer, 41 light years away. In dark skies, the star, known as 55 Cancri, is just visible with the naked eye. Four of the planets in the system are gas giants similar to Jupiter, while the innermost planet is believed to resemble Neptune.

With last year's demotion of Pluto from full planet status to a more lowly "dwarf planet", our solar system now contains eight planets. The inner four are rocky worlds while those further out are massive balls of gas.

The Nasa-funded team say the newly discovered world is similar to Saturn and orbits inside the most distant planet already known to circle 55 Cancri.

"It is amazing to see our ability to detect extra-solar planets growing," said Alan Stern, of Nasa's science mission directorate in Washington. "We are finding solar systems with a richness of planets and a variety of planetary types comparable to our own."



The announcement is all the more significant because the new planet, dubbed 55 Cancri f, is the first known outside our solar system to spend its entire orbit within what astronomers call the "habitable zone". The zone marks a "Goldilocks" band of space where the heat from a star leaves a planet neither too hot nor too cold to support liquid water, which is believed to be crucial for life.

Pools of water

The planet weighs about 45 times the mass of Earth and completes one orbit every 260 days. The distance from its star is approximately 72.5m miles, slightly closer than Earth is to our sun, but it orbits a star that is slightly fainter.

Scientists involved in the discovery believe that if the planet has a rocky moon, as they expect, any water on its surface would flow freely, dramatically increasing the odds that it could harbour life. "The gas-giant planets in our solar system all have large moons," said Debra Fischer, an astronomer at San Francisco State University and lead author on a paper due to appear in an issue of the Astrophysical Journal. "If there is a moon orbiting this new, massive planet, it might have pools of liquid water on a rocky surface."

The team also believe another planet orbits 55 Cancri, lurking between the fourth and fifth most distant worlds, which may also lie within the habitable zone. Working with astronomer Geoff Marcy at the University of California, Berkeley, Dr Fischer discovered the planet after observation of 2,000 nearby stars using telescopes at the Lick Observatory on Mount Hamilton near San Jose and the huge Keck Observatory in Mauna Kea, Hawaii.

The astronomers were able to infer the position and size of the new planet by analysing shifts in starlight coming from 55 Cancri, caused by orbiting planets wrenching the star back and forth as they swing past. More than 320 measurements were required to disentangle signals from each of the planets.

"This system has a dominant gas giant planet in an orbit similar to our Jupiter. Like the planets orbiting our sun, most of these planets reside in nearly circular orbits," said Dr Fischer.

Prof Marcy, who contributed to the paper, said: "The significance is marvellous, I think. We now know that our sun and its family of planets is not unusual. This discovery shows that our Milky Way contains billions of planetary systems, many as rich as our own solar system. We strongly suspect many of those planetary system harbour Earth-like planets."

To date, more than 260 planets have been discovered beyond our solar system.

"This work marks an exciting next step in the search for worlds like our own," said Michael Briley, an astronomer at the US National Science Foundation. "To go from the first detections of planets around sun-like stars to finding a full-fledged solar system with a planet in a habitable zone in 12 years is a testament to the years of hard work put in by these investigators."

The sky's no limit: Searching for new planets

The worldwide hunt for planets beyond our solar system began in earnest in the early 1990s. Since then, leaps in technology have allowed astronomers to spot more than 260 other worlds orbiting distant stars.

The first "extrasolar" planet or "exoplanet" circling a star similar to our sun was reported in 1995 by Michel Mayor's team at the University of Geneva. The planet, which orbits the star 51 Pegasi, more than 50 light years from Earth, was detected using a telescope to watch the wobble of the star as the planet looped around it. Other researchers watch for the tiny dimming in starlight that occurs when a distant planet moves across the face of its star.

The vast majority of planets discovered so far are massive gas giants, similar to Jupiter. They are the easiest to detect because they exert a huge pull on their stars and cast larger shadows as they cross in front of their stars.

Planet 55 Cancri f was discovered after observation of 2,000 nearby stars using telescopes at the Lick Observatory on Mount Hamilton near San Jose and the Keck Observatory, right, in Mauna Kea, Hawaii.

Earlier this year, Swiss astronomers announced the discovery of a planet around a star called Gliese 581c. Although the team initially believed it might support liquid water and so be capable of harbouring life, that now appears unlikely.

In July, scientists at University College London used data from Nasa's Spitzer space telescope to claim the first discovery of water in the atmosphere of an extrasolar planet, called HD 189733 that lies 63 light years away.

The search for exoplanets has steadily shifted towards smaller rocky planets similar to our own, a quest driven by the inevitable desire to know whether life has evolved elsewhere in the galaxy. Although detecting Earth-like planets is beyond today's technology, it should be within the capability of space missions planned for the near future.

Last year, the French space agency, Corot, launched the first dedicated space-based probe to hunt for planets and is expected to report on new findings before the end of the year. In 2009, the launch of Nasa's Kepler probe may give astronomers the first realistic chance of discovering a second Earth. Future missions, including the European Space Agency's tentative Darwin project, will back those up by looking for signs of life in atmospheric gases of faraway planets.

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