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Rocky planets, resembling Earth could be found around most sun
like stars in our galaxy, a new research suggests, raising scientists’ hopes that
they will someday find extra-terrestrial or at least primitive life beyond our
solar system.
Using, NASA’s Spitzer Telescope, Michael Meyer of the University of Arizona discovered that at least 20
percent and possibly up to 60 percent of stars similar to the Sun could potentially
have rocky planets in orbit around them.
Meyer looked at six groups of stars with masses comparable
to the Sun, with the youngest being between 10 and 30 million years old and the
oldest between a billion and three billion years old.
He and his colleagues detected discs of cosmic dust around
stars in some of the youngest groups surveyed. They believe the dust is a
by-product of rocky debris colliding and merging to form planets.
It is already thought that giant clouds of dust that gather
in a disc around stars form terrestrial planets. If these clouds become dense
enough, they collapse in on themselves by gravity to form big balls of rock.
“From those observations of dust, we infer the presence of
colliding larger rocky bodies, not unlike asteroids and other things in our
solar system that we know bang together and generate dust. By tracing that
dust, we trace these dynamical processes that we think led to the formation of
the terrestrial planets in our solar system,” Meyer said when presenting his
findings Monday at the annual meeting of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science. His findings also appear in the February edition of the
Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Meyer added that more studies were needed to determine which
of these stars possibly hold extraterrestrial life.
“What we need is much more data, more missions, more
observations to inform what we hope will become a predicted theory of planet
formation that we can use to guide our search for life in the universe," he
said.
However, he said the theory about the existence of only nine
planets in our Solar System was no longer valid, as “there are hundreds if not thousands
of planets” in it.
The European Space Administration’s Darwin mission is currently conducting a
similar research for extraterrestrial life. This mission is aimed at discovering
extra solar planets and whether their atmospheres can sustain life.
However, NASA’s Kepler mission, due to be launched next
year, is expected to reveal more clues about these distant undiscovered worlds.
Kepler is designed to survey our region of the Milky Way galaxy to detect and
characterize hundreds of Earth-size and smaller planets that are close enough
to their stars to support possible life.
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