“Major
new
class”
of
more
Earth-like
planets
discovered
Posted
August
31,
2004
World
Science
staff
Astronomers
this
morning
announced
the
discovery
of
a
major
new
class
of
planets,
which
are
far
more
Earth-like
than
any
discovered
outside
our
Solar
System
before.
The
new
findings
also
suggest
there
may
be
20
billion
or
more
planetary
systems
in
our
galaxy
alone,
said
the
researchers.
Some
of
the
newfound
planets
appear
to
be
substantially
more
small
and
solid
than
the
giant,
gaseous
planets
discovered
before,
researchers
said.
This
means
these
newer
planets
are
more
likely
to
be
able
to
harbor
life
forms,
although
whether
they
do
so
is
completely
unknown.
Two
newfound
planets,
not
far
from
our
galactic
neighborhood,
are
only
two
to
three
times
as
wide
as
Earth
and
weigh
15
to
20
times
as
much,
said
Geoff
Marcy
of
the
University
of
California
at
Berkeley,
one
of
the
co-discoverers.
Previous
discoveries
of
planets
outside
the
solar
system
involved
objects
some
50
times
heavier
than
Earth.
"We're
poised
for
the
next
step
in
planet
discovery,
namely
finding
truly
Earth-mass
planets,"
he
said.
NASA
and
the
astronomers
reported
the
discovery
at
a
news
conference
on
Tuesday.
Most
of
the
planet
detection
techniques
available
to
date
have
been
suitable
only
for
detecting
the
very
largest
planets
outside
our
Solar
System.
Such
planets
are
usually
made
entirely
of
gas,
a
fact
that
combined
with
their
tremendous
gravity
would
make
life
virtually
impossible
to
sustain
there.
Astronomers
have
been
racing
to
find
smaller
planets.
With
the
next
generation
of
telescopes,
many
speculate,
it
will
be
possible
to
detect
Earth-sized
planets.
The
current
findings
are
seen
as
an
intermediate
step
toward
such
a
finding.
"This
is
a
milestone.
We've
crossed
a
hurdle,
finally,"
said
Paul
Butler
of
the
Carnegie
Institution
of
Washington.
"We
can't
quite
see
the
Earth-like
planets
yet,
but
we
are
seeing
their
big
brothers."
One
of
the
two
planets,
called
Gliese
436,
is
orbiting
a
very
common
type
of
small
star,
called
an
M
dwarf,
Marcy
added.
This
means
that
planetary
systems
may
be
much
more
common
in
the
solar
system
than
has
been
suspected
to
date,
he
added.
There
may
be
an
estimated
20
billion
of
them
or
more,
he
said.
In
addition,
the
planet
is
part
of
a
system
containing
at
least
four
planets,
the
researchers
added.
This
would
be
the
largest
number
planets
found
orbiting
one
star,
with
the
exception
of
our
solar
system.
The
two
newfound
planets
are
within
40
light
years
of
Earth,
considered
a
relatively
small
distance
in
space
terms.
They
were
discovered
using
the
so-called
wobble
technique,
in
which
a
planet
is
detected
based
on
the
the
wobble
of
the
star
it
orbits.
The
wobble
is
due
to
the
planet's
gravity.
"We've
just
made
a
huge
leap
toward
finding
planets
that
look
like
our
own,"
said
Alan
Boss
of
the
Carnegie
Institution
of
Washington,
D.C.,
who
wasn't
involved
in
the
research.
However,
there
may
be
some
reason
for
skepticism
that
the
newfound
planets
contain
life.
Some
researchers
have
reported
that
the
vast
differences
between
our
Solar
System
and
other
solar
systems
thus
far
discovered
mean
that
Earth-like
planets
are
unlikely
to
be
found
the
the
others.
(See
World
Science
story
of
Aug.
3,
2004).