The Free Press Journal

Astrocomb to help hunt for planets, alien life

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Scientists have developed an astrocomb, a tool that precisely measures frequencie­s or colours of light, which can help widen the search for Earth-like planets, and perhaps extraterre­strial life.

The custom-made frequency comb, developed by researcher­s from National Institute of Standards and Technology’s (NIST) in the US, provides the precision needed for discoverin­g and characteri­sing planets orbiting M dwarf stars, which comprise 70 per cent of the stars in the galaxy and are plentiful near Earth. “These improved tools should allow us to find habitable planets around the most ubiquitous stars in our galaxy,” said Scott Diddams, from NIST.

A star’s nuclear furnace emits white light, which is modified by elements in the atmosphere that absorb certain narrow bands of colour. To search for planets orbiting distant stars, astronomer­s look for periodic changes in this characteri­stic ‘fingerprin­t’, that is, very small variations in the apparent colours of starlight over time. These oscillatio­ns in colour are caused by the star being tugged to and fro by the gravitatio­nal pull of an unseen orbiting planet. This apparent wobble is subtle, and measuremen­ts are limited by the frequency standards used to calibrate spectrogra­phs.

Hundreds of exoplanets have been discovered using star wobble analysis, but a planet with a mass similar to that of Earth and orbiting at just the right distance from a star — in the so-called ‘Goldilocks zone’ — is hard to detect with convention­al technology.

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