Houston Chronicle

Nearby Earth-size planet may support life

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There’s a new place to look for life in the universe.

Astronomer­s announced Wednesday the discovery of an Earth-size planet around a small red star in our corner of the galaxy. The planet could hold liquid water and conditions favorable for life.

The star, Ross 128, is not the closest with a planet similar in size to ours. That would be the sun’s next door neighbor, Proxima Centauri, just 4.2 lightyears away.

And there appears to be just one planet orbiting Ross 128 — not the bounty of seven Earth-size planets that circle Trappist-1, a red dwarf about 40 light-years from here.

But unlike those stars, Ross 128, about 11 lightyears from Earth, appears to be a quiet, well-behaved star, without the violent eruptions of radiation that might wipe out any beginnings of life.

“Those flares can sterilize the atmosphere of the planet,” said Xavier Bonfils of the Institute of Planetolog­y and Astrophysi­cs in Grenoble, France, the lead author of a paper describing the planet. “Ross 128 is one of the quietest stars of the neighborho­od.”

The findings appear in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysi­cs.

The astronomer­s did not directly see the planet but instead used a telescope in Chile to measure wobbles in the wavelength­s of light coming from the star. The wobbles are caused by the gravitatio­nal pull of the unseen planet.

Astronomer­s have in the past couple of decades discovered an abundance of star-hugging planets. The Ross 128 planet is only about 4.5 million miles from the star, much closer than the 93 million miles between Earth and the sun. Even Mercury, the innermost planet, is 36 million miles from the sun.

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