NASA's Deep Space Camera Locates Host of 'Earths'
Published July 25, 2010
| NewsCore
Scientists celebrated Sunday after
finding more than 700 suspected new planets -- including up to 140
similar in size to Earth -- in just six weeks of using a powerful new
space observatory.
Early results from NASA’s Kepler Mission, a
small satellite observing deep space, suggested planets like Earth were
far more common than previously thought.
Past discoveries suggested most planets
outside our solar system were gas giants such as Jupiter and Saturn --
but the new evidence tipped the balance in favor of solid worlds.
Astronomers said the discovery meant the
chances of eventually finding truly Earth-like planets capable of
sustaining life rose sharply.
NASA so far formally announced only five new
exoplanets -- those outside our solar system -- from the mission
because its scientists were still analyzing Kepler’s finds to confirm
they are actually planets.
“The figures suggest our galaxy, the Milky
Way [which has more than 100 billion stars] will contain 100 million
habitable planets, and soon we will be identifying the first of them,”
said Dimitar Sasselov, professor of astronomy at Harvard University and a
scientist on the Kepler Mission. "There is a lot more work we need to
do with this, but the statistical result is loud and clear, and it is
that planets like our own Earth are out there."
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