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More than 100 'Earth-like' planets discovered in past few weeks
http://www.dailymai l.co.uk/sciencet ech/article- 1296841/More- 100-
Earth- like-planets- just-past- weeks.html
By Niall Firth
Last updated at 11:43 AM on 23rd July 2010

More than 100 planets that are a similar size to Earth have been
discovered in just the past few weeks, it has been announced.

The discovery was made by the space telescope Kepler which has been
scanning the skies for planets that are orbiting stars since it was
launched in January last year.

The breakthrough raises the tantalising prospect that we may not be
alone in the Universe.

Scientists now believe that there are likely to be around 100 million
planets in the Milky Way that harbour exactly the right conditions for
life.

And they expect to be able to identify around 60 of these habitable
Earth-like planets within the next two years.
Part of Sasselhov's presentation in which he described how Kepler is
looking for planets like our own

Part of Sasselhov's presentation in which he described how Kepler is
looking for planets like our own by measuring the signal when a planet
passes in front of its star

Astronomer Dimitar Sasselov told a conference that a space telescope
has uncovered 140 different planets which are around the same size as
Earth.

He described the remarkable breakthrough as ‘fulfilling the dreams of
Copernicus’.

Kepler finds planets by detecting almost imperceptible 'winks' - the
tiny amount of dimming that occurs each time a planet moves across the
face of a star.

'Transits', as they are known, by terrestrial planets produce a small
change in a star's brightness of about 100 parts per million, lasting
for 2 to 16 hours.

Information such as a planet's size and the extent of its orbit can be
calculated from the amount of dimming, the length of time between
'winks' and the star's mass.

It will be searching the heavens for day and night without any
interruption for the next 4 years, Sasselhov said.

Sasselov unveiled Kepler’s discoveries at the TEDGlobal conference in
Oxford last week. Guest speakers at TED are given just 18 minutes each
to outline their ‘big idea’.

He said: ‘Life is a chemical system that really needs a smaller
planet, water and rocks and lots of complex chemistry to originate
emerge and survive.

Sasselov said: ‘There is a lot more work we need to do with this but
the statistical result is loud and clear and it is that planets like
our own Earth are out there.

‘Our own Milky Way galaxy is rich in thee kinds of planets.’

For the next stage of the mission the team will study all of the
candidate planets and try and discern which of them have the right
conditions for life.

‘This is great news because with our own little telescope, just in the
next two years we’ll be able to identify 60 of them,’ he said.

Sasselov said that over the past 15 years almost 500 planets have been
found around other stars in the galaxy but, until now, few of these
had been considered Earth-like.

‘Science is in the process of redefining life as we know it,’ he said.

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