News Science New Earth-sized planet ‘Ross 128 b’ discovered outside solar system

New Earth-sized planet ‘Ross 128 b’ discovered outside solar system

Ross 128 b is currently 11 light-years from Earth. The planet is moving towards us and is expected to become our nearest stellar neighbour in just 79,000 years.

New Earth-sized planet ‘Ross 128 b’ discovered outside solar system New Earth-sized planet ‘Ross 128 b’ discovered outside solar system

Scientists have discovered an Earth-sized planet which may be comfortable abode for possible life. This planet, named Ross 128 b, is currently located at a distance of 11 light-years from Earth.

According to a paper presented in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, a team working with High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS) at the La Silla Observatory in Chile found that the low-mass exoplanet orbits the red dwarf star Ross 128 every 9.9 days.

“This discovery is based on more than a decade of HARPS intensive monitoring together with state-of-the-art data reduction and analysis techniques,” Nicola Astudillo- Defru from University of Geneva in Switzerland, said.

Red dwarfs are some of the coolest, faintest and most common stars in the universe. This makes them very good targets in the search for exoplanets. Many red dwarf stars, including Proxima Centauri, are subject to flares that occasionally bathe their orbiting planets in deadly ultraviolet and X-ray radiation. 

However, researchers said, it seems that Ross 128 is a much quieter star and so its planets may be the closest known comfortable abode for possible life.

Xavier Bonfils from University of Grenoble in France, who is the lead author of the research, said that it is easier to detect small cool siblings of Earth around these stars, than around stars more similar to the Sun.

They added that although it is currently 11 light-years from Earth, Ross 128 is moving towards us and is expected to become our nearest stellar neighbour in just 79,000 years — a blink of the eye in cosmic terms.

Ross 128 b will by then take the crown from Proxima b and become the closest exoplanet to Earth, researchers said.

The team found that Ross 128 b orbits 20 times closer than the Earth orbits the Sun. Despite this proximity, Ross 128 b receives only 1.38 times more irradiation than the Earth. As a result, Ross 128 b’s equilibrium temperature is estimated to lie between minus 60 and 20 degrees Celsius, thanks to the cool and faint nature of its small red dwarf host star, which has just over half the surface temperature of the Sun.

While the scientists consider Ross 128b to be a temperate planet, uncertainty remains as to whether the planet lies inside, outside, or on the cusp of the habitable zone, where liquid water may exist on a planet’s surface.

Astronomers are now detecting more and more temperate exoplanets, and the next stage will be to study their atmospheres, composition and chemistry in more detail. The detection of biomarkers such as oxygen in the very closest exoplanet atmospheres will be a huge next step, researchers said.