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Planets beyond Milky Way? It’s possible

Scientists may have discovered planets outside Milky Way

- By Alex Horton

A cluster of planets 3.8 billion light years away, if confirmed, could extend the boundary of what we know about the universe.

The truth is out there. And past that is a cluster of planets 3.8 billion lightyears away, a recent discovery that if confirmed, could extend the boundary of what we know about the universe.

Using data from a NASA X-ray laboratory in space, Xinyu Dai, an astrophysi­cist and professor at the University of Oklahoma, detected, for the first time ever, a population of planets beyond the Milky Way.

The mass of the planets range in size from Earth’s moon to the massive Jupiter, our solar system’s biggest planet.

There are few methods to determine the existence of distant planets. They are so far away that no telescope can observe them, Dai told The Washington Post.

So Dai and his postdoctor­al researcher Eduardo Guerras relied on a scientific principle to make the discovery: Albert Einstein’s Theory of Relativity.

Einstein’s theory suggests light bends when tugged by the force of gravity. In this case, the light is coming from a quasar — the nucleus of a galaxy with a swirling black hole — which emits powerful radiation in the distance.

Between that quasar and the space-based laboratory is the galaxy of newly discovered planets. The gravitatio­nal force of the galaxy bends the light heading toward the Milky Way, illuminati­ng the galaxy in an effect called microlensi­ng.

In that way, the galaxy acts as a magnifying glass of sorts, bringing a previously unseen celestial body into X-ray view.

The technique was first used to first identify planets outside of our Solar System but inside the galaxy, known as exoplanets.

“Microlensi­ng is probably the only way,” Dai said.

The photo that emerged is a modest image of the extraordin­ary find that Dai said will advance the study of planetary science. The central elliptical object is the galaxy where the planets reside.

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