Planet Gliese 581 c Discovery
Description
In 2007, astronomers discovered the one of the first planets most like Earth outside our Solar System to date, an exoplanet with a radius only 50% larger than the Earth and capable of having liquid water. Using the ESO 3.6-m telescope, a team of Swiss, French and Portuguese scientists discovered a super-Earth about 5 times the mass of the Earth that orbits a red dwarf, already known to have harbored a Neptune-mass planet. The astronomers have since discovered additional planets orbiting this star. This exoplanet - as astronomers call planets around a star other than the Sun - was the smallest ever found up to that point and it completes a full orbit in 13 days. It is 14 times closer to its star than the Earth is from the Sun. However, given that its host star, the red dwarf Gliese 581, is smaller and colder than the Sun - and thus less luminous - the planet nevertheless lies in the habitable zone, the region around a star where water could be liquid! The planet's name is Gliese 581 c. "We have estimated that the mean temperature of this super-Earth lies between 0 and 40 degrees Celsius, and water would thus be liquid," explains Stéphane Udry, from the Geneva Observatory (Switzerland) and lead-author of the paper reporting the result. "Moreover, its radius should be only 1.5 times the Earth's radius, and models predict that the planet should be either rocky - like our Earth - or fully covered with oceans," he adds. "Liquid water is critical to life as we know it," avows <b>...</b>
Keywords
European Southern Observatory, exoplanet, Gliese 481c
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