Times Colonist

NASA telescope finds 10 more planets that could have life

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WASHINGTON — NASA’s planet-hunting telescope has found 10 new planets outside our solar system that are likely the right size and temperatur­e to potentiall­y have life on them, broadly hinting that we are probably not alone.

After four years of searching, the Kepler telescope has detected a total of 49 planets in the “Goldilocks zone.” And it only looked in a tiny part of the galaxy, one quarter of one per cent of a galaxy that holds about 200 billion stars.

Seven of the 10 newfound Earth-size planets circle stars that are just like ours, not cool dwarf ones that require a planet be quite close to its star for the right temperatur­e. That doesn’t mean the planets have life, but some of the most basic requiremen­ts that life needs are there, upping the chances for life.

“Are we alone? Maybe Kepler today has told us indirectly, although we need confirmati­on, that we are probably not alone,” Kepler scientist Mario Perez said in a Monday news conference.

Outside scientists agreed that this is a boost in the hope for life elsewhere.

“It implies that Earth-size planets in the habitable zone around sun-like stars are not rare,” Harvard astronomer Avi Loeb, who was not part of the work, said in an email.

The 10 Goldilocks planets are part of 219 new candidate planets that NASA announced Monday as part of the final batch of planets discovered in the main mission since the telescope was launched in 2009. It was designed to survey part of the galaxy to see how frequent planets are and how frequent Earth-size and potentiall­y habitable planets are. Kepler’s main mission ended in 2013 after the failure of two of its four wheels that control its orientatio­n in space.

It’s too early to know how common potentiall­y habitable planets are in the galaxy because there are lots of factors to consider, including that Kepler could only see planets that move between the telescope vision and its star, said Kepler research scientist Susan Mullally of the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California.

It will take about a year for the Kepler team to come up with a number of habitable planet frequency, she said.

Kepler has spotted more than 4,000 planet candidates and confirmed more than half of those. A dozen of the planets that seem to be in the potentiall­y habitable zone circle Earthlike stars, not cooler red dwarfs.

Circling sun-like stars make the planets “even more interestin­g and important,” said Alan Boss, an astronomer at the Carnegie Institutio­n, who wasn’t part of the Kepler team.

One of those planets — KOI7711 — is the closest analog to Earth astronomer­s have seen in terms of size and the energy it gets from its star, which dictates temperatur­es.

Before Kepler was launched, astronomer­s had hoped that the frequency of Earth-like planets would be about one per cent of the stars. The talk among scientists at a Kepler conference in California last weekend is that it is closer to 60 per cent, he said.

Kepler isn’t the only way astronomer­s have found exoplanets and even potentiall­y habitable ones. Between Kepler and other methods, scientists have now confirmed more than 3,600 exoplanets and found about 62 potentiall­y habitable planets.

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