Engineering News Blog

Engineering News

Latest news of interest to engineers. Sourced from GlobalSpec's Engineering News

Previous in Blog: A Waste Gasification Plant In a Truck   Next in Blog: Tiny Motors May Ease Road For Robotic Surgery
Close
Close
Close
Rate Comments: Nested

First Earth-Sized Exoplanet May Have Been Found

Posted January 20, 2009 8:39 AM

From Slashdot:

New Scientist is reporting the extrasolar planet MOA-2007-BLG-192Lb — whose discovery was announced just last summer — may actually be the first truly Earth-sized exoplanet to be identified. A new analysis suggests the planet weighs less than half the original estimate of 3.3 Earth masses; the new estimate pegs the planet's size at 1.4 Earth masses. The planet orbits a small red dwarf star, some 3,000 light-years from here, at an orbital distance of 0.62 astronomical units, about the same distance as Venus from our sun. One significance of the planet's discovery is that it points to the probable ubiquity of smaller terrestrial planets in somewhat Earth-like orbits around red dwarf stars, the oldest and most numerous stars in the galaxy. Here is a video report from the discoverers.

Read the whole article

Reply

Interested in this topic? By joining CR4 you can "subscribe" to
this discussion and receive notification when new comments are added.
Anonymous Poster
#1

Re: First Earth-Sized Exoplanet May Have Been Found

01/20/2009 11:17 AM

Even at 0.62 AU, wouldn't it still be too cold there? Or am I forgetting to carry the 7 in the inverse square rule or something?

But still maybe this is good news for life, yes? Old, long-burning red dwarfs might have given / still give planets longer to develop life. So the universe might be teeming with telemarketers!

Reply
Reply to Blog Entry

Previous in Blog: A Waste Gasification Plant In a Truck   Next in Blog: Tiny Motors May Ease Road For Robotic Surgery

Advertisement