City
Epaper

Two planets that could support life discovered

By IANS | Updated: June 18, 2019 18:50 IST

Two exoplanets that have been discovered, which are warm similar to Earth and may have water, could be good candidates to support life, according to a study on Tuesday.

Open in App

Scientists have been searching for planets close to nearby stars since 2016 using a 3.5-meter telescope.

Images captured at the Calar Alto Observatory in Almeria, southern Spain, and two other Spanish telescopes allowed researchers to analyse, in great detail, the Teegarden star a cold red dwarf only around 12.5 light years away from our solar system, Efe news reported.

"Teegarden only has eight per cent of our sun's mass," said Ignasi Ribas, co-author of the study. "It is much smaller and much less brighter than the Sun. In fact, despite being very close to the Earth it was not discovered until 2003," Ribas said.

The temperature of the star is around 2,600C (the Sun's temperature is 5,500C) and because it is 10 times smaller, it's 1,500 times weaker and radiates mostly infrared waves.

Once the star was found, scientists used the Doppler technique, also known as the wobble method, which uses radial-velocity measurements of the parent star to detect planets around it.

The Doppler technique detected at least two signals, which have now been identified as planets Teegarden b and Teegarden c.

Teegarden b has the mass similar to Earth and orbits the star every 4.9 days. The second planet takes 11.4 days to complete the orbit, which is the length of its year.

"In other words, they are much closer to their (parent) star than the Earth is to the Sun," Ribas said.

"Teegarden, the more internal one, receives 10 per cent more light than we do from the Sun, that's why we think it may be too hot and may not have water. But this is just speculation because there are elements of its climate that we don't know and that could mean there could be liquid water," he continued.

Teegarden hovers in the midst of a habitable zone, which means the temperature on its surface is between 0 degree Celcius and 100 degree Celcius, meaning it could very well have water on surface.

What scientists are excited about is that both exoplanets are excellent candidates to support life, alongside Proxima, which to date was the planet that presented the best conditions for habitability.

Experts believe between the closest star to our solar system Proxima Centauri that is four light years away, and Teegarden (the 24th furthest away at 12 light years) there are dozens of stars, some with planets orbiting them, but "apart from Proxima, none of them present ideal conditions (for life)," Ribas said.

Researchers have not ruled out the possibility of there being more planets orbiting Teegarden, but the system would have to be observed in more detail. "These planets are of great interest in order to search for life in the mid-term," Ribas said.

Without doubt, for the scientist, the forthcoming decade will be thrilling and key in space exploration and the search for suitable terrestrial exoplanets.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: TeegardenEarthCalar Alto Observatory
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalSunita Williams Return: Check Time and Date of NASA Astronauts Aboard SpaceX Crew Dragon Capsule Landing on Earth

Social ViralAsteroid 2025 CL3 to Pass Close to Earth Today: Everything You Need to Know

International2024 YR: NASA Says Chances of Asteroid Striking Earth in 2032 Increase From 1.9% to 2.3%

InternationalNASA Predicts 1.9% Chance of Large Asteroid 2024 YR4 Hitting Earth in 2032

Social ViralEarth's Rotation Captured in Viral Timelapse: 24-Hour Axis Spin Visualized from Namibia | WATCH

International Realted Stories

InternationalAt least 68 killed in US airstrike on Yemen migrant detention centre

InternationalPutin thanks North Korean leader for troop deployment to Russia: Reports

InternationalAbu Dhabi International Book Fair shapes future of publishing sector

InternationalMyanmar hit by 157 aftershocks in one month after deadly 7.7 magnitude quake

InternationalJSMM chairman calls for Sindh's freedom, slams Punjab's exploitation of resources