[meteorite-list] OT: New Smallest, Possibly Earth-like, Extra-Solar Planet Announced
From: Sterling K. Webb <kelly_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon Jun 13 20:55:01 2005 Message-ID: <42AE2AC2.C9233A17_at_bhil.com> Hi, All, The "Marcy Team," with 106 detections of extra-solar planets to its credit, announced today number 107, the discovery of the smallest yet detected (by about half the previous detection), It's only 7.5 (+/- 1.5) Earth masses. It orbits Gliese 876, an M-class dwarf about one-third the mass of our Sun and only 15 light years away. We're practically neighbors... The planet is close enough to its star to be pretty warm (200 to 400 degrees C). In theory, it could be a hot mini-Uranus, but Marcy seems to think it's a rocky terrestrial world since it would be hard to hang onto all that gas at 200 degrees C or more. If confirmed, it would be the first detection of an Earth-like world outside the Solar System. Gliese 876 had already been discovered to have, not one, but two Super Jupiters orbiting further out than the new discovery. If the new planet is a rocky terrestrial world, it seems to me to be more likely to be a "Super Venus" than a "Super Earth"! The kind of star these planets orbit, M-class, are the most abundant class of stars, far more numerous than the larger K-class and the even larger G-class (that's us!). M class stars are all over the place. We have more M class neighboring stars (within 10-20 light years) than all the other kinds put together. If M class stars can have terrestrial planets close enough to be warm, then we may be sailing along in a cloud of Earths! Here's the National Science Foundation press release: <http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=104243&org=NSF&from=news> And a somewhat less technical one: <http://skyandtelescope.com/news/article_1530_1.asp> Sterling K. Webb Received on Mon 13 Jun 2005 08:54:26 PM PDT |
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