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NASA scientists said they discovered a fifth planet orbiting a star outside our own solar system and say the discovery suggests there are many solar systems that are, just like our own, packed with planets. The new planet is much bigger than Earth, but is a similar distance away from its sun, a star known as 55 Cancer, the astronomers said on Tuesday.
Four planets had already been seen around the star, but the discovery marks the first time as many as five planets have been found orbiting a solar system outside our own with its eight planets, said Debra Fischer, an astronomer at San Francisco State University.
Life could conceivably live on the surface of a moon that might be orbiting the new planet, but such a moon would be far too small to detect using current methods, the astronomers said. "The star is very much like our own sun. It has about the same mass and is about the same age as our sun," Fischer told reporters."It's a system that appears to be packed with planets."
It took the researchers 18 years of careful, painstaking study to find the five planets,
which they found by measuring tiny wobbles in the star's orbit. The first planet
discovered took 14 years to make one orbit.They said 55 Cancri is 41 light-
HARBORING LIFE?
It is the fourth planet out from
the star and completes one orbit every 260 days -
"It
would be a little bit warmer than the Earth but not very much," said Jonathan Lunine,
a planetary scientist at the University of Arizona. The planet is 72 million miles
from its star -
Marcy and other astronomers strongly believe that many stars are
hosts to solar systems similar to our own. But small objects such as planets are
very hard to detect. Technology that would allow scientists to detect planets as
small as Earth is decades away, the scientists agreed. The researchers have been
looking at 2,000 nearby stars using the Lick Observatory near San Jose, California,
and the W.M. Keck Observatory in Mauna Kea, Hawaii. The inner four planets of 55
Cancri are all closer to the star than Earth is to the sun. The closest, about the
mass of Uranus, zips around the star in just under three days at a distance of 3.5
million miles.
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