Scientists discover two new "super-Earth" planets just 100 light-years away — and one may be suitable for life
An international team of scientists announced on Wednesday that they have discovered two new "super-Earth" planets just 100 light-years away. Both of them are significantly larger than our own planet — and one of them may even be suitable for life.
Super-Earths are a unique class of exoplanet in the solar system that are more massive than our planet but lighter than the ice giants, according to NASA. They are made by some combination of gas and rock and can get up to 10 times the size of Earth's mass.
The findings, discovered with NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite and the University of Liège's Search for Habitable Planets Eclipsing Ultra-Cool Stars (SPECULOOS), will be published in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics.
Both newly-found planets circle LP 890-9, a "relatively low activity" red dwarf star, which according to NASA typically has a narrow habitable zone.
The first planet, LP 890-9b or TOI-4306b, was first captured by NASA's satellite and was later confirmed to be an exoplanet by SPECULOOS. It is about 30% larger than our planet with a radius of more than 5,200 miles and orbits its sun in just 2.7 days.
But it's a second planet previously unknown to scientists that has proven to be the most intriguing. LP 890-9c, or SPECULOOS-2c, lies slightly farther away from its star than the first planet. It's about 40% bigger than Earth with a radius of more than 5,400 miles and takes about three times as long as its neighboring planet to orbit its star.
According to researchers, that orbit duration is within the star's habitable zone.
"Although this planet orbits very close to its star, at a distance about 10 times shorter than that of Mercury around our sun, the amount of stellar irradiation it receives is still low, and could allow the presence of liquid water on the planet's surface, provided it has a sufficient atmosphere," study co-author Francisco Pozuelos said.
That's because the planet's star, LP 890-9, is about 6.5 times smaller and is roughly half as cool temperature-wise as our sun, he explained.
"This explains why LP 890-9c, despite being much closer to its star than the Earth is to the Sun, could still have conditions that are suitable for life," Pozuelos added.
Researchers now plan to study the atmosphere of the planet to determine just how habitable it could be. Based on their findings, it's believed that it could be the second most favorable terrestrial planet to sustain life.
"The discovery of LP 890-9c therefore offers a unique opportunity to better understand and constrain the habitability conditions around the smallest and coolest stars in our solar neighborhood," lead researcher Laetitia Delrez said.
The new find comes just weeks after scientists announced the discovery of another "super-Earth" that could potentially support life, calling it a "water world." The exoplanet, named TOI-1452 b, orbits a red dwarf star that is also about 100 light years away from our planet, which scientists say is "fairly close."