Video: NASA discovers two Earth-sized planets

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    >>> a lot of discovering of new planets going on lately. they just discovered one a few days back, and now they found two more. the new ones are kepler 20-e and 20-f. both planets are close to earth's size. the bummer is the temperature. daytime highs averaging 800 and 1,400 degrees. it's a dry 800 and 1,400 degrees. while it would take any known spacecraft millions of years to get there, it's nice to know they're out there.

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updated 12/20/2011 7:39:30 PM ET 2011-12-21T00:39:30

Two planets orbiting a star 950 light-years from Earth are the smallest alien worlds known, astronomers announced Tuesday. One of the planets is actually smaller than Earth, scientists say.

These planets, while roughly the size of our planet Earth, are circling very close to their star, giving them fiery temperatures that are most likely too hot to support life, researchers said. The discovery, however, brings scientists one step closer to finding a true twin of Earth that may be habitable.

"We've crossed a threshold: For the first time, we've been able to detect planets smaller than the Earth around another star," lead researcher François Fressin of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., told Space.com. "We proved that Earth-size planets exist around other stars like the sun, and most importantly, we proved that humanity is able to detect them. It's the beginning of an era."

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To discover the new planets, Fressin and his colleagues used NASA's Kepler space telescope, which noticed the tiny dips in the parent star's brightness when the planets passed in front of it, blocking some of its light. This is called the transit method of planet detection. The researchers then used ground-based observatories to confirm that the planets actually exist by measuring minute wobbles in the star's position caused by gravitational tugs from its planets.

"These two new planets are the first genuinely Earth-sized worlds that have been found orbiting a sunlike star," Greg Laughlin, an astronomer at the University of California at Santa Cruz ho was not involved in the new study, said in an email to Space.com. "For the past two decades, it has been clear that astronomers would eventually reach this goal, and so it's fantastic to learn that the detection has now been achieved." [Gallery: Smallest Alien Planets Ever Seen]

Chances for life
The two Earth-size planets are among five alien worlds orbiting a star called Kepler-20 that is of the same class (G-type) as our sun, and is slightly cooler.

Two of the star system's planets, Kepler-20e and Kepler-20f, are 0.87 times and 1.03 times the width of Earth, respectively, making them the smallest exoplanets yet known. They also appear to be rocky, and have masses less than 1.7 and 3 times Earth's mass, respectively.  Scientists think that they are composed mainly of silicates and iron, much like Earth, though they lack our planet's atmosphere.

Kepler-20e makes a circle around its star once every 6.1 days at a distance of 4.7 million miles (7.6 million kilometers) — almost 20 times closer than Earth, which orbits the sun at around 93 million miles (150 million kilometers).

The planet's sibling, Kepler-20f, makes a full orbit every 19.6 days, at a distance of 10.3 million miles (16.6 million kilometers). Both planets circle closer to their star than Mercury does to the sun. [Infographic: Earth-Size Alien Planets Explained]

These snuggly orbits around their star give the newfound planets steamy temperatures of about 1,400 degrees Fahrenheit (760 degrees Celsius) and 800 degrees F (430 degrees C) — way too warm to support liquid water, and probably too hot for life as we know it, researchers said.

Fressin said the chance of life on either of these planets is "negligible," though the researchers can't exclude the possibility that they used to be habitable in the past, when they might have been farther from their star. There is also a slim chance that there are habitable regions on the planets in spots between their day and night sides (the planets orbit with one half constantly facing their star and the other half always in dark). But astronomers aren't holding out hope.

Image: Planetary lineup
Tim Pyle / CfA
This planetary lineup displays two Earth-sized extrasolar planets, Kepler-20 e and Kepler-20 f, together with Earth and Venus, ranked by their size. Kepler-20 f is represented with an atmosphere, since it may possibly have one, while Kepler-20 e is entirely rocky, as it is likely too hot and would have lost its atmosphere to evaporation.

"The chances of liquid water and life as we know it on Kepler-20e and f are zero," Laughlin said.

Flip-flopped planets
The planetary system around Kepler-20 is an unusual one.

For one thing, scientists say the rocky planets can't have formed in their current locations.

"There's not enough rocky material that close to the host star to form five planets," Fressin said. "They didn't form here; they probably formed farther from their star and migrated in."

Furthermore, the five planets are in an odd order, with the rocky worlds alternating with their gaseous, Neptune-size siblings. That's quite different from most solar systems, including our own, which keeps the rocky terrestrial worlds in close to the sun and the gas giants farther out.

"The architecture of that solar system is crazy," science team member David Charbonneau of Harvard University said during a Tuesday teleconference about the finding. "This is the first time that we've seen anything like this."

Scientists will likely have to revise their theories of how planets form to fully understand the Kepler-20 system.

"How did that form?" Fressin said. "I think it's a puzzle the theorists will have to try to explain."

The star's other planets are called Kepler-20b, 20c, and 20d. Their diameters are 15,000 miles (24,000 kilometers), 24,600 miles (40,000 kilometers) and 22,000 miles (35,000 kilometers), respectively, and they orbit Kepler-20 once every 3.7, 10.9 and 77.6 days.

The largest of these, Kepler-20d, weighs a little less than 20 times Earth's mass, while Kepler-20c is 16.1 times as heavy as Earth, and Kepler-20b is 8.7 times our planet's mass.

Evolving effort
Scientists say finding the smallest exoplanets yet represents a significant milestone in the fast-evolving effort to learn about planets beyond the solar system.

The first alien planet was discovered in 1996, and the first planet found through the transit method came just 11 years ago. Both of those planets were roughly the size of Jupiter.

"I think we're living in special times," Fressin said. "This was unfeasible 10 years ago, and just with the quality of detectors and the quality of the treatment is it possible now."

The total tally of known alien planets is above 700. Kepler alone has discovered 28 definite alien planets, and 2,326 planet candidates, since its launch in March 2009.

Earlier this month, the Kepler team announced another landmark find, the first planet known to occupy the habitable zone around its star where liquid water, and perhaps life, could exist. That planet, called Kepler-22b, is about 2.4 times as wide as Earth.

The dream now is for astronomers to combine the two discoveries and find an Earth-size planet that's also orbiting its star in an Earthlike orbit that puts it in the habitable zone.

"The holy grail of the search for other worlds is to find an Earth analogue, a true Earth twin," Fressin said. "We just need to have these two pieces of the puzzle together."

While the newfound planets orbit with periods of 6.1 and 19.6 days, Fressin estimated the habitable zone around Kepler-20 begins at orbits that take roughly 100 days to make a circuit.

Astronomers think it's only a matter of time before they finally find one that's just right.

"These discoveries are a great technological step forward — to detect small planets, in size like Earth — but these planets are very hot and not in the habitable zone around their star," astronomer Lisa Kaltenegger of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics wrote in an email. Kaltenegger, who studies the habitability of exoplanets, was not involved in the new study.

"If we can already find these small planets with radii around Earth's now, some future ones could be in the habitable zone of their stars and those future ones would be great targets to look for liquid water and signatures for life," Kaltenegger said.

A paper detailing the discovery was published online by the journal Nature on Tuesday.

You can follow Space.com assistant managing editor Clara Moskowitz on Twitter @ClaraMoskowitz. Follow Space.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter@Spacedotcom  and on Facebook.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Interactive: The search for extrasolar planets

Photos: Month in space: January 2012

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  1. See-through telescope

    A clever time-exposure photograph shows the Swiss 1.2-meter Leonhard Euler Telescope inside its dome at the European Southern Observatory's La Silla facility in Chile. The image is a 75-second exposure taken while the slit of the telescope dome was making half of a rotation at full speed. A dim light was switched on in the interior of the building to illuminate the telescope and the ghostly blur of the dome's interior. The resulting photo, taken in 2009, is the ESO's Picture of the Week for Dec. 26. (Malte Tewes / ESO) Back to slideshow navigation
  2. Golden eye

    The Helix Nebula glows like a cosmic eye in an infrared image captured by the European Southern Observatory's VISTA telescope and released Jan. 19. The Helix is a planetary nebula - an expanding cloud of gas and dust thrown out by a dying star 700 light-years from Earth. (EPA/ESO/VISTA/J. EMERSON / EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  3. Stricken ship seen from space

    The luxury cruise ship Costa Concordia can be seen lying off the Italian coast in a Jan. 17 satellite photo provided by DigitalGlobe. The ship ran aground shortly after setting off on a Mediterranean cruise on Jan. 13. More than 30 people from the ship are dead or missing. (DigitalGlobe via Reuters) Back to slideshow navigation
  4. Alaskan lights

    The skies over the frozen Susitna River near Talkeetna, Alaska, are lit up by a display of the northern lights on Jan. 23. The aurora was enhanced by solar flares in the days preceding the event. (Michael Dinneen / AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  5. Loops on the sun

    Cascading loops spiral above an active region on the sun in an extreme-ultraviolet image sent back to Earth by NASA's Solar Dynamics Laboratory on Jan. 15-16. These loop structures are made of superheated plasma, just one of which is the size of several Earths. (NASA/GSFC/SDO) Back to slideshow navigation
  6. To the launch pad

    Russia's Soyuz TMA-03M spacecraft is rolled out by train to its launch pad at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Dec. 19. The Soyuz sent a U.S.-Russian-European trio to the International Space Station on Dec. 21. (Carla Cioffi / NASA via Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  7. Farewell to Earth

    Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko, NASA astronaut Don Pettit and Dutch astronaut André Kuipers wave goodbye from a stairway leading to the launch-pad elevator at the Baikonur Cosmodrome on Dec. 21. The three spacefliers rode a Soyuz spacecraft from Baikonur to the International Space Station. (Stephane Corvaja / ESA via Getty Images) Back to slideshow navigation
  8. Set for Landsat

    White-garbed engineers work on the Thermal Infrared Sensor for the next Landsat satellite at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland on Jan. 30. After testing is complete, the sensor will be integrated with the LDCM spacecraft in Arizona. The Landsat Program is a series of Earth-observing satellite missions jointly managed by NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey. (Rebecca Roth / NASA/GSFC) Back to slideshow navigation
  9. Lovely Lovejoy

    The long tail of Comet Lovejoy is visible near Earth's horizon in this nighttime image photographed by NASA astronaut Dan Burbank aboard the International Space Station on Dec. 21. (Dan Burbank / NASA via AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  10. A new look at the Pillars

    This picture of the Eagle Nebula, released Jan. 17, combines a far-infrared view from the Herschel Space Observatory with an X-ray view from XMM-Newton to show how the hot young stars detected by the X-ray observations are sculpting and interacting with the surrounding ultra-cool gas and dust, which provide the critical material for star formation. The clouds just below the center of the image are known as the "Pillars of Creation," and were the subject of a famous Hubble Space Telescope picture in 1995. (ESA) Back to slideshow navigation
  11. Figure 8 in the ocean

    An image from the European Space Agency's Envisat Earth-observing satellite, released Jan. 13, shows a phytoplankton bloom swirling like a figure 8 in the South Atlantic Ocean, about 375 miles east of the Falkland Islands. (ESA) Back to slideshow navigation
  12. Day of Remembrance

    NASA Administrator Charles Bolden leads agency personnel and other onlookers in a wreath-laying ceremony as part of NASA's Day of Remembrance at Arlington National Cemetery on Jan. 26. Wreaths were laid in memory of the men and women who lost their lives in the quest for space exploration. Among those remembered were the astronauts killed in the Apollo 1 fire (Jan. 27, 1967), the Challenger explosion (Jan. 28, 1986) and the Columbia breakup (Feb. 1, 2003). (Bill Ingalls / NASA via EPA) Back to slideshow navigation
  13. Dunes of Mars

    This enhanced-color image, acquired by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and released on Jan. 25, shows sand dunes trapped in a Martian impact crater in Noachis Terra. Dunes and sand ripples of various shapes and sizes display the natural beauty created by physical processes. The area covered in the image is about six-tenths of a mile (1 kilometer) across. (NASA via AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  14. Titan at center stage

    The colorful globe of Saturn's largest moon, Titan, passes in front of the planet and its rings in this true-color snapshot from NASA's Cassini spacecraft. The imagery was obtained on May 21, 2011, when Cassini was 1.4 million miles from Titan, and released on Dec. 22. (NASA / JPL-Caltech / SSI) Back to slideshow navigation
  15. Titan's haze

    A close-up view of the Saturnian moon Titan reveals a depression within the moon's orange and blue haze layers, near the moon's south pole. The picture was taken by the Cassini spacecraft on Sept. 11, 2011, and released Dec. 22. The moon's high-altitude haze layer appears blue here, while the main atmospheric haze is orange. The difference in color could be due to particle size of the haze. The blue haze probably consists of smaller particles than the orange haze. (NASA / JPL-Caltech / SSI) Back to slideshow navigation
  16. The Keys from space

    The many colors of the Florida Keys are captured in a true-color picture acquired on Jan. 4 by NASA's Aqua satellite. (NASA/GSFC/Jeff Schmaltz/MODIS Land Rapid Response Team) Back to slideshow navigation
  17. New Blue Marble

    This updated "Blue Marble" image of our planet was produced from data acquired on Jan. 4 by the Visible/Infrared Imager Radiometer Suite aboard NASA's Suomi NPP satellite. Suomi NPP is the first of a new generation of satellites that will be used for climate observations as well as weather monitoring. (NASA via AP) Back to slideshow navigation
  18. Winter on the Plains

    The effects of heavy snowfall can be seen across a region spreading from New Mexico to Kansas in this Dec. 21 picture, taken just before the official start of winter by NASA's Aqua satellite. The state lines for New Mexico, Colorado, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Nebraska have been added to the satellite image. (NASA Goddard MODIS Rapid Response Team) Back to slideshow navigation
  19. Earth's newest island

    A new island has formed in the Red Sea, about 40 miles from the coast of Yemen. Local fishermen reported an eruption near the island of Saba, while satellites captured a white plume rising from the sea, and a pulse of sulfur dioxide. The volcanic activity was located on the northern edge of the Zubair Islands. This Jan. 7 image from NASA's EO-1 satellite shows the plume of ash and steam rising from the newly uplifted island. (Robert Simmon / NASA) Back to slideshow navigation
  20. Flash in the sky

    This photo combines the landscape of the Florida Keys with the flash of a meteor in the skies above on the night of Jan. 3-4, during the peak of the annual Quadrantid meteor shower. (Jeff Berkes Photography) Back to slideshow navigation
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