Wednesday, 4 February 2015

Eight New Goldilocks Planets that May Host Alien Life Found





Eight New Goldilocks Planets that May Host Alien Life Found


Excerpt from utahpeoplespost.com
By Frank Smith


Scientists from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA)

recently reported that they identified eight new exoplanets orbiting

their host stars in the so-called “Goldilocks” zone. Researchers also

said that many of these objects have an increased chance to be

Earth-like, rocky planets with a high potential of hosting alien life.


The “Goldilocks zone,” or the habitable zone, is a patch of space

around a Sun-like star that allow planets orbiting within it hold liquid

water on their surface if they also have the necessary atmospheric

pressure for it. Most Goldilocks planets are Earth-sized so scientists

hope that one of them may host life, even microbial forms of life.


The new discovery of the exoplanets doubles the number of known

planets located in the habitable zone of their host stars. Scientists

explain that the habitable zone implies that the planets within it

receive as much solar as our planet does. Too much radiation and heat

would boil the water on their surface and even blow away their

atmosphere. Too little radiation would lead to a small icy world.


The authors of the discovery also reported that two of the newly

found planets are the most akin to Earth than any other known exoplanets

to this date. The two planets were named Kepler-438b and Kepler-442b

after the space telescope that had discovered them.


Kepler-438b is located 470 light-years from our planet, while

Kepler-442b stands in the constellation Lyra at a 1,120 light-year-long

distance away from Earth. Kepler-442b is also the most remote exoplanet

of the eight.


The two planets have also an extremely short orbit because they are

very close to their host stars. On Kepler-438b, which has a diameter

only 12 percent than the Earth’s, a year lasts only 35 days, while on

Kepler-442b, which is nearly one third larger than our planet, a year

passes every 112 days.

Scientists estimate that Kepler-438b has a 70 percent increased chance

of having a rocky core, while Kepler-442b has only a 60 percent chance.


However, the two planets being in the habitable zone of their host

stars is not a certain fact. For instance, astronomers estimate that

Kepler-438b has only a 70 percent chance of being located in the

Goldilocks zone, while Kepler-442b has a 97 percent chance of being a

Goldilocks planet.




We don’t know for sure whether any of the planets in our

sample are truly habitable. All we can say is that they’re promising

candidates,”



David Kipping of the CfA and co-author of the discovery said.




Source Article from http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AscensionEarth2012/~3/ntsWpefn9ys/eight-new-goldilocks-planets-that-may.html



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