by Miriam Kramer, SPACE.com Staff Writer
Date: 25 June 2013 Time: 09:21 AM ET
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This artist’s impression shows the view from the exoplanet
Gliese 667Cd looking towards the planet’s parent star (Gliese 667C).
Image released on June 25, 2013.
CREDIT: ESO/M. Kornmesser
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The habitable zone of a nearby star is filled to the brim with planets
that could support alien life, scientists announced today (June 25).An international team of scientists found a record-breaking three potentially habitable planets around the star
Gliese 667C,
a star 22 light-years from Earth that is orbited by at least six
planets, and possibly as many as seven, researchers said. The three
planet contenders for alien life are in the star's "habitable zone" —
the temperature region around the star where liquid water could exist.
Gliese 667C is part of a three-star system, so the planets could see
three suns in their daytime skies.
The three potentially rocky planets in Gliese 667C's habitable zone are known as super-Earths —
exoplanets
that are less massive than Neptune but more massive than Earth. Their
orbits make them possible candidates for hosting life, officials from
the European Southern Observatory said in a statement. [
See images of the alien planets of star Gliese 667C]
This diagram shows the system of planets around
star Gliese 667C. A record-breaking three planets in this system are
super-Earths inside the star's habitable zone, where liquid water could
exist, making them possible candidates for alien life. This is the first
system found with a fully packed habitable zone. Separation of planets
not to scale. Image released June 25, 2013.
CREDIT: ESO
"We knew that the star had three planets from previous studies, so we
wanted to see whether there were any more," co-leader of the study Mikko
Tuomi of the University of Hertfordshire, U.K. said in a statement. "By
adding some new observations and revisiting existing data we were able
to confirm these three and confidently reveal several more. Finding
three low-mass planets in the star's habitable zone is very exciting!"
This is the first time three low-mass planets have been spotted in the habitable zone
of the same star system, and it's unlikely that astronomers will find
any more around Gliese 667C. The star's habitable zone is packed full,
making it impossible for another planet to orbit stably within the zone,
the researchers said.
This picture shows the sky around multiple star
Gliese 667. The bright star at the centre is Gliese 667 A and B, the two
main components of the system, which cannot be separated in this image.
CREDIT: ESO
"The number of potentially habitable planets in our galaxy is much
greater if we can expect to find several of them around each low-mass
star — instead of looking at 10 stars to look for a single potentially
habitable planet, we now know we can look at just one star and find
several of them," team member Rory Barnes of the University of
Washington said in a statement.
Gliese 667C is the faintest star in the three-star system. From the
surface of the planets in orbit around Gliese 667C, the two brighter
stars would be as bright as the full moon by night and shine visibly
during the day, ESO scientists said.
Gliese 667C is cooler and dimmer than the sun, making it possible for
planets that have very close-in orbits to remain habitable. This star's
habitable zone lies within an orbit the size of Mercury's around the
sun, ESO officials said.
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