Billions
of habitable worlds lurking in Milky Way
boost odds of finding alien life
By ANI
From
London (ANI): Our galaxy may be teeming with billions ofhabitable planets,
which could have huge consequences on the search for extra-terrestrial life,
according to a recent survey.
Two
Princeton researchers recently contemplated that we really might be alone in
the universe, but the study of red dwarf stars in the Milky Way discovered nine
super-Earths - and two in the 'habitable zone' where liquid water could exist.
Red
dwarf stars account for 80 per cent of the 200 to 400 billion stars in our
galaxy and scientists now believe that 40 per cent of those might have a planet
in the habitable zone, the Daily Mail reported.
The news
that the Milky Way may include billions of habitable planets has given
California-based SETI institute - the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
scientists something to smile about
"SETI is
looking for Mr. Right or maybe Ms. Right, depending on your point of view. It
helps to find out that there's 10 times as many candidates as there were
before," SETI Senior Astronomer Seth Shostak said.
However,
Shostak has cautioned that because red dwarfs are comparatively dim,
planets would need to orbit very close to them to get enough heat for life to
grow, which would mean they'd receive potentially fatal doses of radiation.
Protection
may exist, though, in the form of a magnetic field around the planet - or large
oceans, which would guard aquatic life.
"We're
not sure intelligent life, if under water, will be building radio transmitters
and we're going to hear from them,' Shostak said.
"But
it's possible."
The
revelation that the Milky Way may be packed with habitable planets came from an
international team of star gazers led by Dr Xavier Bonfils, from Grenoble
University in France.
"Because
red dwarfs are so common - there are about 160 billion of them in the Milky Way
- this leads us to the astonishing result that there are tens of billions of
these planets in our galaxy alone," he said.
The
astronomers surveyed a cautiously chosen sample of 102 red dwarfs using the
European Southern Observatory's 3.6-metre telescope at La Silla, Chile.
A total
of nine super-Earths - planets with masses between one and 10 times that of
Earth - were discovered.
Two were
situated within the habitable zones of the stars Gliese 581 and Gliese 667 C.
These
data were combined with other observations, including those of stars that did
not have planets.
The
astronomers worked out that habitable zone super-Earths orbiting red dwarfs
occurred with a frequency of nearly 41 per cent.
On the
other hand, massive planets, similar to Jupiter and Saturn, were rare around
red dwarfs. Less than 12 per cent of the stars were expected to have such 'gas
giants'.
As red
dwarfs are common near the sun, many 'super-Earths' may not be far away in
astronomical terms.
The
scientists have estimated that there could be about 100 habitable zone planets
within 30 light years.
The
research has been published in the journal Astronomy 'n' Astrophysics. (ANI)
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