by SANDY ANDERSON
Artist's concept of the potentially habitable planet
candidate Tau Ceti f, which was detected in December 2012. The possible planet,
which is found just 11.9 light-years from Earth, is at least 6.6 times as
massive as Earth.
The first truly Earth-like alien planet is
likely to be spotted next year, an epic discovery that would cause humanity to
reassess its place in the universe.
While astronomers have found a number of
exoplanets over the last few years that share one or two key traits with our
own world — such as size or inferred surface temperature — they have yet to bag
a bona fide "alien Earth." But that should change in 2013, scientists
say.
"I'm very positive that the first Earth
twin will be discovered next year," said Abel Mendez, who runs the
Planetary Habitability Laboratory at the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo.
Planets
piling up
Astronomers discovered the first exoplanet
orbiting a sunlike star in 1995. Since then, they've spotted more than 800
worlds beyond our own solar system, and many more candidates await confirmation
by follow-up observations.
NASA's prolific Kepler Space Telescope, for
example, has flagged more than 2,300 potential planets since its March 2009
launch. Only 100 or so have been confirmed to date, but mission scientists
estimate that at least 80 per cent will end up being the real deal.
The first exoplanet finds were scorching-hot
Jupiter-like worlds that orbit close to their parent stars, because they were
the easiest to detect. But over time, new instruments came online and planet
hunters honed their techniques, enabling the discovery of smaller and more distantly
orbiting planets — places more like Earth.
Last December, for instance, Kepler found a
planet 2.4 times larger than Earth orbiting in its star's habitable zone — that
just-right range of distances where liquid water, and perhaps life as we know
it, can exist.
The Kepler team and other research groups have
detected several other worlds like that one (which is known as Kepler-22b),
bringing the current tally of potentially habitable exoplanets to nine by
Mendez' reckoning.
Zeroing in
on Earth's twin
None of the worlds in Mendez' Habitable
Exoplanets Catalogue are small enough to be true Earth twins. The handful of
Earth-size planets spotted to date all orbit too close to their stars to be
suitable for life.
But it's only a matter of time before a small,
rocky planet is spotted in the habitable zone — and Mendez isn't the only
researcher who thinks that time is coming soon.
"The first planet with a measured size,
orbit and incident stellar flux that is suitable for life is likely to be
announced in 2013," said Geoff Marcy, a veteran planet hunter at the
University of California, Berkeley, and a member of the Kepler team.
Mendez and Marcy both think this watershed find
will be made by Kepler, which spots planets by flagging the tell-tale
brightness dips caused when they pass in front of their parent stars from the
instrument's perspective.
Kepler needs to witness three of these “transits"
to detect a planet, so its early discoveries were tilted toward close-orbiting
worlds (which transit more frequently). But over time, the telescope has been
spotting more and more distantly orbiting planets — including some in the
habitable zone.
An instrument called HARPS (short for High
Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher) is also a top contender, having
already spotted a number of potentially habitable worlds. HARPS, which sits on
the European Southern Observatory's 3.6-meter telescope in Chile, allows
researchers to detect the tiny gravitational wobbles that orbiting planets
induce in their parent stars.
"HARPS should be able to find the most
interesting and closer Earth twins," Mendez said, noting that many Kepler
planets are too far away to characterize in detail. "A combination of its
sensitivity and long-term observations is now paying off."
And there are probably many alien Earths out
there to be found in our Milky Way galaxy, researchers say.
"Estimating carefully, there are 200
billion stars that host at least 50 billion planets, if not more," Mikko
Tuomi, of the University of Hertfordshire in England said.
"Assuming that 1:10,000 are similar to the
Earth would give us 5,000,000 such planets," added Tuomi, who led teams
reporting the discovery of several potentially habitable planet candidates this
year, including an exoplanet orbiting the star Tau Ceti just 11.9 light-years
from Earth. "So I would say we are talking about at least thousands of
such planets."
What it
would mean
Whenever the first Earth twin is confirmed, the
discovery will likely have a profound effect on humanity.
"We humans will look up into the night sky,
much as we gaze across a large ocean," Marcy said. "We will know that
the cosmic ocean contains islands and continents by the billions, able to
support both primitive life and entire civilizations."
Marcy hopes such a find will prod our species to
take its first real steps beyond its native solar system.
"Humanity will close its collective eyes,
and set sail for Alpha Centauri," Marcy said, referring to the closest
star system to our own, where an Earth-size planet was discovered earlier this
year.
"The small steps for humanity will be a
giant leap for our species. Sending robotic probes to the nearest stars will
constitute the greatest adventure we Homo sapiens have ever attempted,"
Marcy added. "This massive undertaking will require the cooperation and
contribution from all major nations around world. In so doing, we will take our
first tentative steps into the cosmic ocean and enhance our shared sense of
purpose on this terrestrial shore."

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