Seven Milky Way planets could harbour life
Habitable Exoplanets Catalog said it had far exceeded expectations in
search for new Earth
An ambitious project to catalogue every habitable planet has
discovered seven worlds inside the Milky Way that could possibly harbour
life.
Marking its first anniversary, the Habitable Exoplanets Catalog said
it had far exceeded its expectation of adding one or two new planets
this year in its search for a new earth. In recent years scientists from
the Puerto Rico-based Planetary Habitability Laboratory that runs the
catalogue have sharpened their techniques for finding new planets
outside our solar system.
Chile's High Accuracy Radial Veolocity Planet Searcher and the
orbiting Kepler Space Telescope are two of the many tools that have
increased the pace of discoveries.
The Planetary Habitability Laboratory launched the Habitable
Exoplanets Catalog last year to measure the suitability for life of
these emerging worlds and as a way to organise them for the public.It
has found nearly 80 confirmed exoplanets with a similar size to Earth
but only a few of those have the right distance from their star to
support liquid surface water - the presence of which is considered
essential to sustain life.
Seven potentially habitable exoplanets are now listed by the
Habitable Exoplanets Catalog, including the disputed Gliese 581g, plus
some 27 more from NASA Kepler candidates waiting for confirmation.
Although all these exoplanets are superterrans are considered
potentially habitable, scientists have not yet found a true Earth
analogue.
- The Independent
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