Cape Argus

Closest Earth-like planet discovered

At 4.2 light years away, in space terms, it is right on our doorstep

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BRITISH astronomer­s have discovered the nearest Earth-like planet that could be home to alien life. Named Proxima b, it orbits Proxima Centauri, the closest star to our sun.

At 4.2 light years away, in space terms it is right on the doorstep and high speed spaceships now being devised could reach it within decades. In time, scientists say, the rocky planet 1.3 times the size of Earth, could even be colonised by space travellers.

Proxima b is thought to be 7.56 million kilometres, one-twentieth of the Earth’s distance from the Sun. Its year lasts 11.2 of our days.

One side may be perpetuall­y stuck in daytime, while the other experience­s perpetual night. But Proxima Centauri, part of the Alpha Centauri star system, is much smaller and cooler than our sun.

This means Proxima b lies within the “habitable zone” where it is not too hot or too cold, but right for liquid water and thus life to exist, according to the research team, who published their findings in the journal Nature.

While other planets with the potential to sustain life have been identified, Proxima b is by far the nearest to Earth. An artist’s impression shows a mountainou­s surface, bathed in an eerie red light.

Researcher Professor Richard Nelson of Queen Mary University of London said it may be bathed in vast, deep oceans. “This is the sort of discovery that you dream of as an astronomer,” he said.

The first hints of Proxima b’s existence came from work done at the University of Hertfordsh­ire in 2013. Powerful telescopes in Chile’s Atacama desert detected “wobbles” in the movement of Proxima Centauri which were characteri­stic of it being tugged by a planet’s gravity.

But it has taken until now for scientists to be confident of their findings. Co-author Dr John Barnes, of the Open University, said: “If further research concludes that the conditions are suitable to support life, this is arguably one of the most important scientific discoverie­s we will ever make.”

Dr Guillem Anglada-Escude, also of QMUL, who led the internatio­nal research team, told New Scientist: “I think of (it as) something like Mars, as it is under a red sun. A planet with polar caps, reddish on the surface, maybe with a thin atmosphere. Succeeding in the search for the nearest terrestria­l planet beyond the solar system has been an experience of a lifetime.

“We hope these findings inspire future generation­s to keep looking beyond the stars. The search for life on Proxima b comes next.”

Any life would have to be able to survive powerful UV rays and X-ray flares that bombard the planet. Convention­al spacecraft would take many thousands of years to reach Proxima b. But Professor Stephen Hawking and Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg have come up with Starshot, an ambitious project to build tiny laser-driven spaceships that could accelerate to a quarter of the speed of light.

Proxima b has become the project’s primary target. The aim is to launch probes within the next two to three decades. They would take 20 years to reach Proxima b. Photos of the planet would take another four years to be beamed back to Earth.

Professor Abraham Loeb, chairman of the Starshot advisory board, said a spacecraft with a camera and filters“could take colour images of the planet and infer whether it is green (harbouring life as we know it), blue (with water oceans on its surface) or just brown (dry rock)”. – Daily Mail

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? EXPERIENCE OF A LIFETIME: A view of the surface of the planet Proxima b orbiting the red dwarf star Proxima Centauri, the closest star to our sun, is seen in an artist’s impression released by the European Southern Observator­y.
PICTURE: REUTERS EXPERIENCE OF A LIFETIME: A view of the surface of the planet Proxima b orbiting the red dwarf star Proxima Centauri, the closest star to our sun, is seen in an artist’s impression released by the European Southern Observator­y.

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