By Ker Than,
(Oct. 3) - Astronomers have spotted evidence of a second Earth being
built around a distant star 424 light-years away.
NASA A belt of dust surrounding a nearby star has the potential to
congeal into an Earth-like planet, scientists said.
Using NASA 's Spitzer Space Telescope, astronomers have spotted a huge
belt of warm dust swirling around a young star called HD 113766 that is
just slightly larger than our sun. The dust belt, which scientists
suspect is clumping together to form planets, is located in the middle
of the star system's terrestrial habitable zone where temperatures are
moderate enough to sustain liquid water. Scientists estimate there is
enough material in the belt to form a Mars-sized world or larger.
At approximately 10 million years old, the star is just the right age
for forming rocky planets, the researchers say. Their finding will be
detailed in an upcoming issue of Astrophysical Journal.
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"The timing for this system to be building an Earth is very good," said
study team member Carey Lisse of the Johns Hopkins University Applied
Physics Laboratory in Baltimore, Md.
If the star system were too young, the planet-forming disk would be
full of gas, and it would be making gas-giant planets like Jupiter
instead. If it were too old, Spitzer would have spotted rocky planets
that had long ago formed.
The star system also has the right mix of dusty materials in its disk
to form an Earth-like planet, Lisse said.
Using Spitzer's infrared spectrometer instrument, the team determined
that the material around HD 113766 is more processed than the
snowball-like stuff that makes up infant solar systems and comets,
which are considered cosmic "refrigerators" because they contain
pristine ingredients from the solar system's formative period. But it
is also not as processed as the stuff found in mature planets and
asteroids.
"The material mix in this belt is most reminiscent of the stuff found
in lava flows on Earth," Lisse said. "I thought of Mauna Kea [in
Hawaii] material when I first saw the dust composition in this system –
it contains raw rock and it's abundant in iron sulfides, which are
similar to fool's gold."
Earlier this year, scientists announced they had found evidence for
one, and possibly two, already formed Earth-like planets around Gliese
581, a dim red star located only 20.5 light-years away. The possible
planets, called Gliese 581c and Gliese 581d, are located at about the
right distance from their star to support liquid water and life as we
know it, but many more observations are needed to confirm this.
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope captures a the celestial equivalent of a
geode in this gas cavity carved by stellar wind. Real geodes are
baseball-sized rocks that start out as bubbles in volcanic flows.
To date, planet hunters have discovered more than 250 extrasolar
planets, or "exoplanets." Most of the distant worlds, however, are
giant gas planets several times the size of Jupiter.
While life is known to exist only on our planet, the range of exoplanet
types found so far has astronomers increasingly confident that many
worlds in our galaxy could be habitable. Finding Earth-like worlds in
habitable zones is a first step toward the technically challenging task
of discovering biology outside our solar system
Original
Source
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