The Denver Post

Jackpot: Scientists discover Earth-like planet at nearby star

- By Seth Borenstein

washington» After scanning the vast reaches of the cosmos for Earth-like planets where life might exist, astronomer­s have found one right next door.

A planet that’s rocky like Earth and only slightly bigger has been discovered orbiting Proxima Centauri, the nearest star to our solar system, scientists reported Wednesday. It is probably in the not-too-hot, not-toocold Goldilocks Zone where liquid water — a key to life — is possible, if the planet has an atmosphere.

And it is a mere 4.22 lightyears from Earth, or nearly 25 trillion miles.

It is easily the closest potentiall­y habitable planet ever detected outside our solar system — and one that could be reachable by tiny, unmanned space probes before the end of the century, in time for some people alive today to witness it.

The internatio­nal team of astronomer­s that announced the discovery did not actually see the planet but deduced its existence indirectly, by using telescopes to spot and precisely calculate the gravitatio­nal pull on the star by a possible orbiting body — a triedand-true method of planethunt­ing.

“We hit the jackpot here,” said Guillem Anglada-Escude , an astrophysi­cist at the Queen Mary University of London and lead author of a study on the discovery in the journal Nature. He said the planet is “more or less what we have on Earth.”

They’re calling it Proxima b, and while it could be like Earth in the important features, it would probably still look very alien.

It is 4.6 million miles from its red dwarf star, or just one-twentieth of the distance between Earth and the sun, creating an incredible orange sky with no blue, so it looks like a perpetual sunset. And if that’s not different enough, the planet circles its star so quickly that its year is about 11 days.

The planet doesn’t rotate, so one side is always facing its star and the other side is always dark and colder. It is bombarded with X-rays and ultraviole­t light, but that wouldn’t necessaril­y be fatal to life, since life can exist undergroun­d, scientists said.

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