An international team of astronomers have discovered more
than 100 new exoplanets, or planets outside our solar system, according to
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology.
The “treasure trove of new worlds” were found using NASA’s
Kepler Space telescope according to a NASA news release, The telescope, which
was launched in 2009, is part of NASA’s first mission to find habitable,
Earth-sized planets.
Among the 104 newly confirmed exoplanets is a “promising”
planetary system of four planets orbiting a dwarf star more than 181
light-years away, NASA said.
Though two of the planets “are too hot to support life as we
know it,” two other planets in this system — K2-72c and K2-72e — are in the
star’s “habitable” zone, NASA said. This means that liquid water could exist on
these planets’ surfaces.
The only problem is K2-72c and K2-72 circle so close to their
star that their orbits are even tighter than that of Mercury's around the sun,
and Mercury is the closest planet to our sun.
Despite this fact, the possibility that life could arise
cannot be ruled out, according to Ian Crossfield, a Sagan Fellow at the
University of Arizona's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory in Tucson.
Over Kepler’s life, it has identified nearly 5,000 potential
exoplanets, more than 3,200 of which have been verified by ground-based
telescopes. The latest batch of exoplanets includes four that are between 20
percent and 50 percent larger than Earth (larger exoplanets are easier to
detect).
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