By SETH
BORENSTEIN, AP Science
Writer
WASHINGTON - For the
first time astronomers have discovered a
planet outside our solar system that is potentially habitable, with
Earth-like
temperatures, a find researchers described Tuesday as a big step in the
search
for "life in the universe."
The planet
is just the right size, might have water
in liquid form, and in galactic terms is relatively nearby at 120
trillion
miles away. But the star it closely orbits, known as a "red dwarf,"
is much smaller, dimmer and cooler than our sun.
There's
still a lot that is unknown about the new
planet, which could be deemed inhospitable to life once more is known
about it.
And it's worth noting that scientists' requirements for habitability
count Mars
in that category: a size relatively similar to Earth's with
temperatures that
would permit liquid water. However, this is the first outside our solar
system
that meets those standards.
| ...with Earth-like temperatures, a find researchers described Tuesday as a big step in the search for "life in the universe." |
"It's a
significant step on the way to finding
possible life in the universe," said University of Geneva astronomer
Michel Mayor, one of 11 European scientists on the team that found the
planet.
"It's a nice discovery. We still have a lot of questions."
The results
of the discovery have not been
published but have been submitted to the journal Astronomy and
Astrophysics.
Alan Boss,
who works at the Carnegie Institution of
Washington where a U.S. team of astronomers competed in the hunt for an
Earth-like planet, called it "a major milestone in this business."
The planet
was discovered by the European Southern
Observatory's telescope in La Silla, Chile, which has a special
instrument that
splits light to find wobbles in different wave lengths. Those wobbles
can
reveal the existence of other worlds.
What they
revealed is a planet circling the red
dwarf star, Gliese 581. Red dwarfs are low-energy, tiny stars that give
off dim
red light and last longer than stars like our sun. Until a few years
ago,
astronomers didn't consider these stars as possible hosts of planets
that might
sustain life.
The
discovery of the new planet, named 581 c, is
sure to fuel studies of planets circling similar dim stars. About 80
percent of
the stars near Earth are red dwarfs.
The new
planet is about five times heavier than
Earth. Its discoverers aren't certain if it is rocky like Earth or if
its a
frozen ice ball with liquid water on the surface. If it is rocky like
Earth,
which is what the prevailing theory proposes, it has a diameter about 1
1/2
times bigger than our planet. If it is an iceball, as Mayor suggests,
it would
be even bigger.
Based on
theory, 581 c should have an atmosphere,
but what's in that atmosphere is still a mystery and if it's too thick
that
could make the planet's surface temperature too hot, Mayor said.
However, the
research team believes the average
temperature to be somewhere between 32 and 104 degrees and that set off
celebrations
among astronomers.
Until now,
all 220 planets astronomers have found
outside our solar system have had the "Goldilocks problem." They've
been too hot, too cold or just plain too big and gaseous, like
uninhabitable
Jupiter.
The new
planet seems just right — or at least
that's what scientists think.
"This could be very important," said
NASA
astrobiology expert Chris McKay, who was not part of the discovery
team.
"It doesn't mean there is life, but it means it's an Earth-like planet
in
terms of potential habitability."
Eventually
astronomers will rack up discoveries of
dozens, maybe even hundreds of planets considered habitable, the
astronomers
said. But this one — simply called "c" by its discoverers
when they
talk among themselves — will go down in cosmic history as No.
1.
Besides
having the right temperature, the new
planet is probably full of liquid water, hypothesizes Stephane Udry,
the
discovery team's lead author and another Geneva astronomer. But that is
based
on theory about how planets form, not on any evidence, he said.
"Liquid
water is critical to life as we know
it," co-author Xavier Delfosse of Grenoble University in France, said
in a
statement. "Because of its temperature and relative proximity, this
planet
will most probably be a very important target of the future space
missions
dedicated to the search for extraterrestrial life. On the treasure map
of the
Universe, one would be tempted to mark this planet with an X."
Other
astronomers cautioned it's too early to tell
whether there is water.
"You need
more work to say it's got water or
it doesn't have water," said retired NASA astronomer Steve Maran, press
officer for the American Astronomical Society. "You wouldn't send a
crew
there assuming that when you get there, they'll have enough water to
get
back."
The new
planet's star system is a mere 20.5 light
years away, making Gliese 581 one of the 100 closest stars to Earth.
It's so
dim, you can't see it without a telescope, but it's somewhere in the
constellation
Libra, which is low in the southeastern sky during the midevening in
the
Northern Hemisphere.
"I expect
there will be planets like Earth,
but whether they have life is another question," said renowned
astrophysicist Stephen Hawking in an interview with The Associated
Press in
Orlando. "We haven't been visited by little green men yet."
Before you
book your extrastellar flight to 581 c,
a few caveats about how alien that world probably is: Anyone sitting on
the
planet would get heavier quickly, and birthdays would add up fast since
it
orbits its star every 13 days.
Gravity is
1.6 times as strong as Earth's so a
150-pound person would feel like 240 pounds.
But oh, the
view. The planet is 14 times closer to
the star it orbits. Udry figures the red dwarf star would hang in the
sky at a
size 20 times larger than our moon. And it's likely, but still not
known, that
the planet doesn't rotate, so one side would always be sunlit and the
other
dark.
Distance is
another problem. "We don't know
how to get to those places in a human lifetime," Maran said.
Two teams of
astronomers, one in Europe and one in
the United States, have been racing to be the first to find a planet
like 581 c
outside the solar system.
The European
team looked at 100 different stars
using a tool called HARPS (High Accuracy Radial Velocity for Planetary
Searcher) to find this one planet, said Xavier Bonfils of the Lisbon
Observatory, one of the co-discoverers.
Much of the
effort to find Earth-like planets has
focused on stars like our sun with the challenge being to find a planet
the
right distance from the star it orbits. About 90 percent of the time,
the
European telescope focused its search more on sun-like stars, Udry
said.
A few weeks
before the European discovery earlier
this month, a scientific paper in the journal Astrobiology theorized a
few days
that red dwarf stars were good candidates.
"Now we have
the possibility to find many
more," Bonfils said.
(http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070425/ap_on_sc/habitable_planet)