Astronomers have a good day when they detect one planet inside a star system's habitable zone. A mostly European team of researchers must be giddy, then, as it just found three of those ideally located planets around Gliese 667C. The group has combined existing observations from the ESO's Very Large Telescope
with new HARPS telescope data to spot the trio of super-Earths, all of
which could theoretically support liquid water. As long as the discovery
holds up, it may have a big impact on exoplanetary research:
it shows both that three super-Earths can exist in one system and that
more than one survivable planet can orbit a low-mass star. We can only
do so much with the findings when Gliese 667C is 22 light-years away,
but it's good to learn that space could be more human-friendly than we
once thought.Labels
- adsense (41)
- Adsense Arabic (8)
- Android (12)
- Apps (124)
- BlackBerry (3)
- EAV (46)
- ESET (47)
- ESET Username password EAV Trial (47)
- Forex (9)
- Games (481)
- iMac (2)
- iPad (12)
- iphone (1)
- iWatch (1)
- LeapPad Ultra tablet (1)
- LG (2)
- Mobile New (67)
- News (652)
- Nexus 7 (1)
- nod32 (79)
- Rémi Gaillard (3)
- Samsung (8)
- Samsung Galaxy (17)
- Sony Xperia Z Ultra (9)
- Sprint Vital (1)
- Trial (27)
- TweetDeck (1)
- Username password (46)
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Astronomers find three planets in Gliese 667C's habitable zone
Astronomers have a good day when they detect one planet inside a star system's habitable zone. A mostly European team of researchers must be giddy, then, as it just found three of those ideally located planets around Gliese 667C. The group has combined existing observations from the ESO's Very Large Telescope
with new HARPS telescope data to spot the trio of super-Earths, all of
which could theoretically support liquid water. As long as the discovery
holds up, it may have a big impact on exoplanetary research:
it shows both that three super-Earths can exist in one system and that
more than one survivable planet can orbit a low-mass star. We can only
do so much with the findings when Gliese 667C is 22 light-years away,
but it's good to learn that space could be more human-friendly than we
once thought.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment