Astronomers find first 'Habitable' Planet
- Astronomers have identified more than 400 planets orbiting around stars beyond our solar system in the past 15 years. The longtime quest to find a planet habitable for life has led to the discovery of a new planet that bears the closest resemblance to Earth.
The new planet named Gliese 581g, discovered by a team of astronomers led by Steven Vogt of the University of California and Paul Butler of the Carnegie Institution in Washington, is found at the Goldilocks zone and is reported to have the right mass to retain liquid water and a substantial atmosphere that could potentially sustain life.
Gliese 581g in Goldilocks Zone
Located some 20 light-years from Earth, Gliese 581 is among the hundred closest stars to us. Already scientists have detected six planets orbiting the red dwarf, making Gliese 581 the hub of the largest known planetary system outside our solar system.
The star has also inspired perhaps the largest number of habitable-planet headlines.
For starters, planet Gliese 581c was announced in 2007 as potentially habitable but later found to orbit too close to the star—making the planet too hot for life.
Another planet, Gliese 581d, is thought to orbit on the cold side of the habitable zone. While Gliese 581d could harbor life, the planet would need a thick atmosphere with a strong greenhouse effect to warm up to the point of habitability. (Find out why some think Gliese 581d may hold water.)
"They are very close to habitable, but not quite," Steve Vogt, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said during the briefing.
"This one is right between the two, in the same system."
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Terminator Aliens on Earthlike Planet?
Roughly three times more massive than Earth, the newfound planet is tidally locked to its star, which means that one side is perpetually basked in daylight, the other side constantly dark.
Aliens, if they exist, are most likely to live along the line between shadow and light, a temperate region known as the terminator, the scientists said.
Imagining the view from the terminator, Vogt said, "You basically see this star sitting on the horizon. You see an eternal sunrise or sunset, depending on whether you are an optimist or a pessimist."
Planet Discovery Suggests Billions More
The Gliese 581g discovery is based on 11 years of observations, largely via the W.M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii. The data allowed scientists to detect the wobble in a star's orbit caused by the gravitational pull of an orbiting planet—a technique called radial velocity.
Given the relative ease of finding this planet, 10 to 20 percent of all stars may have potentially habitable planets, Vogt said in a press release. (See an interactive guide to the hundreds of known planets.)
"There could be tens of billions of these systems in our galaxy."
The Gliese 581g habitable-planet findings are to be reported in a future issue of The Astrophysical Journal.