YAHOO.COM - An Earth-like alien planet may reside right in our solar system's
backyard, just 13 light-years or so away, astronomers announced this week.
That number is just an estimate, though, and not based on an exoplanet discovery.
The researchers used data from NASA's prolific planet-hunting Kepler space telescope,
which is staring at more than 150,000 stars simultaneously. Kepler
detects planets by measuring the temporary brightness dips caused when
the worlds pass in front of, or transit, their stars' faces from the
instrument's perspective.
The team pulled out a sample of 3,897 red dwarfs — stars dimmer and
smaller than our own sun — and determined that Kepler has identified 95
exoplanet candidates circling them. Three of these candidates are
roughly Earth-size and orbit within their stars' "Goldilocks zone,"
where liquid water (and possibly life as we know it) can exist.
Kepler isn't able to detect every planet circling every star that it's
watching, researchers noted. Many worlds don't orbit in the right plane
for Kepler to observe transits, and the signals of others may be masked
by brightness variations inherent to red dwarfs.
Taking this into account, about 6 percent of red dwarfs in the Milky
Way galaxy should host Earth-like planets, the astronomers said.
Since about 75 percent of the galaxy's 100 billion stars are red dwarfs, this translates to an estimated 4.5 billion "alien Earths"
spread throughout the galaxy. The research team stressed, however, that
this is a tentative figure because the distribution of stars varies
widely.
Within 30 light-years of our sun, there are 248 red dwarfs, according
to separate surveys conducted by the Research Consortium on Nearby
Stars, an international astronomical group led by Georgia State
University.
In the new study, the research team used this information to find out
how far from Earth we need to go to find planets like our own.
"It should be, hopefully, within 13 light-years," lead author Courtney
Dressing, of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, said
during a press conference today.
If the Milky Way galaxy were the size of the United States, 13
light-years would be the equivalent of taking a stroll across New York
City's Central Park, she added.
The estimated distance increases to 21 light-years when scientists
apply the standard 95 percent confidence interval to their calculation.
The closest red dwarf to Earth is Proxima Centauri, which is 4.2 light-years away in the three-star Alpha Centauri system.
Last October, scientists announced the discovery of an Earth-size
(though hellishly hot) planet orbiting Alpha Centauri Bb, another star
in the system. No worlds have been detected around Proxima Centauri yet.