NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope discovered an
Earth-like planet circling a nearby star within the Goldilocks zone of our
galaxy.
Kepler-186f is around 500 light-years from Earth in
the Cygnus constellation. The habitable zone, also identified as the Goldilocks
zone, is the area around a star within which planetary-mass objects with enough
atmospheric pressure can sustain liquid water at their surfaces.
While it has been projected that there are at least
40 billion Earth-sized planets circling in our Milky Way Galaxy, this specific
finding is labelled the first Earth-sized planet to be discovered in the
habitable zone of another star.
What Does This Mean?
In addition to Kepler-186f, there are 4 other
planets that circle a nearby star within the Kepler-186f system. What this
means is that if the neighbouring star to this planet is just like our Sun,
then the likelihood of life on this planet exponentially increases.
“We know of only one planet where life survives –
Earth. When we hunt for life outside our solar system, we emphasis on discovering
planets with features that mimic that of Earth,” said Elisa Quintana, research
scientist at the SETI Institute at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Moffett
Field, Calif., and lead author of the paper published in the journal Science.
“Discovering a habitable zone planet similar to Earth in size is a major
breakthrough.”
The neighboring star to Kepler-186f has half the
mass and size as our solar system’s Sun and only gets one-third of the energy
that we get from our Sun. Kepler-186f circles its star once every 130 days.
Reference: NASA
Gee. I wonder if the people there call their planet "Kepler 186-f"? LOL!
ReplyDeleteAnd maybe they eat knishes too.
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