Astronomers have pinpointed a planetary system which resembles our own solar system, raising hopes of the discovery of Earth-like planets capable of bearing life.
For the first time, they have identified a Jupiter-like planet, orbiting a star like the sun, at much the same distance from the parent star as Jupiter is from the sun.
The star, known only as HD70642, is 90 light years away in the constellation Puppis. Scientists estimate this star is orbited, once every six years, by a planet about twice the mass of Jupiter. Jupiter — more massive than all its companion planets combined — takes 12 years to orbit the sun.
”This is the closest we have yet got to a real solar-system-like planet, and advances our search for systems that are even more like our own,” said Hugh Jones of Liverpool John Moores University, who announced the discovery yesterday at a conference on extrasolar planets in Paris.
He and colleagues used a 3,9 metre Anglo-Australian telescope at Siding Springs in New South Wales for the work.
Until 1995, there was no evidence at all of planets orbiting other stars. Since the first dramatic discovery eight years ago, researchers have identified more than 100 planetary systems within 150 light years of Earth.
No one has seen any of these planets: researchers infer the presence of an orbiting planet from a kind of wobble in the light from the parent star. The technique is reliable but has limitations. It can most easily detect star systems with an enormous planet, probably made of gas, in an elliptical orbit that moves very close to the parent star.
But this rules out the possibility of life as Captain James T Kirk and Mr Spock in the television series Star Trek might know it. No conceivable creature could survive on a giant planet, and the presence of such a monster so close to a star would rule out any chance of a small, rocky planet in the same orbit.
Earth is known to astronomers as a ”Goldilocks” planet, not so far away that water freezes, not so close that it boils: in fact, just right for life to evolve. The excitement over HD70642 is because its orbital system leaves room for a series of rocky planets much nearer the parent star. It is the first evidence so far that other stars could be encircled by planets like Earth.
”It is the exquisite precision of our measurements that lets us search for these Jupiters – they are harder to find than the more exotic planets found so far,” said Alan Penny of the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Oxfordshire, another member of the team. ”Perhaps most stars will be shown to have planets like our own solar system.”
Chris McCarthy of the Carnegie Institution in Washington, also in the partnership, said: ”The discovery of planets orbiting other stars allows us to put our own Earth and solar system in a bigger context, a galactic context, for the first time.”
The universe contains perhaps 100-billion galaxies, each containing 100-billion stars. Researchers can only hope to study the nearest of these. Astronomers backed by the US National Science Foundation are working to put all 2 000 of the nearest sun-like stars under scrutiny, out to distances of 150 light years.
”Our goal is twofold,” said Paul Butler of the Carnegie Institution, ”to provide a first reconnaissance — a first census of our nearest neighbours in space — and to provide the first data to address the fundamental question, how common or how rare is our own solar system?”
Until yesterday’s announcement, Earth, Mars and Venus seemed rare, or perhaps even unique. Now planets like them elsewhere in the galaxy are beginning to seem probable. But they still have to be identified. The chase is about to accelerate. The next step is a space-based telescope that can survey the sky for changes in the intensity of starlight as big planets transit across them. In 2008, a new generation of space telescopes will be powerful enough to detect the transit of Earth-sized planets with a one-year orbit.
And in 2015, Nasa and Europe could launch an entire flotilla of spacecraft, all capable of focusing with exquisite accuracy on stars most likely to have rocky planets in their inner zones, in the hope of seeing reflected planetary light directly — and of identifying the chemical signatures of water or oxygen or methane in their atmospheres. Evidence of all three, say the theoreticians, would be an indication of life.
”We are confident — but not overconfident — that we will find Earths,” said Dr Penny. ”Life is another thing: we don’t know how life starts. We could be alone in the universe.”
Life, the universe and everything
‘I think the next goal is obviously Mars. I’m pretty convinced it does not just harbour life, it’s infested. We’d better be careful where we land’ – Arthur C Clarke
‘Of course Aliens could visit Earth. And I’d be delighted if they landed in my garden’ – Patrick Moore
‘I occasionally think how quickly our differences would vanish if we faced an alien threat from outside this world’ – Ronald Reagan
‘Sometimes I think the surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us’ – Bill Watterson, cartoonist – Guardian Unlimited Â