A recent discovery might have located a nearby solar system with up to five planets, one of them could be in just the right distance from its star to hold liquid water which is considered essential to life as we now them.
Another day, another planet discovered outside our solar system. This time the discovery happened on one of Earth’s closest neighbors – Tau Ceti – located only 12 light-years from our sun. A group of astronomers from the University of Hertfordshire in the United Kingdom lead by Astronomer Mikko Tuomi, analyzed more than 6000 observations of Tau Ceti conducted in the past using telescopes in Chile, Australia, and Hawaii and concluded that Tau Ceti exemplifies
Despite locating over 850 planets around distant stars since the mid 1990’s (when the first Extrasolar planet orbiting 51 Pegasi was discovered), the task of discovering small – Earth-like planets around distant stars is still extremely challenging. Unlike stars, planets do not emit light and when watched from a great distance it’s all but impossible to observe to observe directly using (today’s) even most powerful optical telescopes. For that reason during the past two decades scientists created several techniques for locating planets using more indirect methods such as transit, Gravitational microlensing, Pulsar timing as well as radial velocity method which measures minute differences in the parent star’s movement as it moves towards and away from the direction of Earth. These differences can be caused by the existence of planets circling the star and after carful and lengthy measurements over a long period of time scientists can deduce with some level of certainty, whether a planet or planets indeed orbit a star using this indirect method.
Mikko Tuomi and his team used the radial velocity method to analyze thousands of observations of Tau Ceti and deduced that at least 5 planets are currently orbiting the star. Tau Ceti is a bright G-type yellow main-sequence star like our sun and is one of the closest stars to earth (only 18 stellar systems are known to be closer).
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