New planet with Earthlike orbit
Mon, Aug 5 2007
A planet outside our solar system with a year roughly equal to Earth's has been discovered around a dying, red giant star. So far this is the tenth such red giant star to have a planet found circling it.
The new planet, spotted using the Hobby-Eberly Telescope at the McDonald Observatory in West Texas, circles its bloated parent star every 360 days and is located about 300 light-years away, in the constellation Perseus.
The red giant star is twice as massive and about 10 times larger than the sun. Its planet is about the size of Jupiter or larger and was discovered using the so-called wobble technique, in which astronomers look for slight wiggles in a star's motion created by the gravitational tug of orbiting planets.
The discovery could help astronomers understand what will happen to our sun's brood of planets when it exhausts its store of hydrogen fuel and its outer envelope begins to swell. When that happens in an estimated 5 billion years, our sun will be so big that it will engulf the inner planets and most likely Earth. But long before that happens, life on our planet will have perished and its seas will have boiled away.
Entertainment




Sorry: you have already voted!
Related Articles:
| A hole in the universe | Risky Mission to Mars |