An international research team led by the University of Gottingen has discovered two new Earth-like planets near one of our closest neighboring stars. "Teegarden's star" is only about 12.5 light years away from Earth and is one of the smallest known stars. It is only about 2,700 °C warm and about ten times lighter than the Sun. Although it is so close to us, the star wasn't discovered until 2003. The scientists observed the star for about three years. The results were published in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics.
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| Teegarden’s Star and its two planets, our Solar System in the background [Credit: University of Gottingen, Institute for Astrophysics] |
The astronomers suspect that the two planets could be part of a larger system. "Many stars are apparently surrounded by systems with several planets," explains co-author Professor Stefan Dreizler of the University of Gottingen. Teegarden's star is the smallest star where researchers have so far been able to measure the weight of a planet directly. "This is a great success for the Carmenes project, which was specifically designed to search for planets around the lightest stars," says Professor Ansgar Reiners of the University of Gottingen, one of the scientific directors of the project.
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| The two planets are located within the habitable zone around Teegarden’s Star [Credit: University of Gottingen, Institute for Astrophysics] |
"An inhabitant of the new planets would therefore have the opportunity to view the Earth using the transit method," says Reiners. The new planets are the tenth and eleventh discovered by the team.
Carmenes is carried out by the universities of Gottingen, Hamburg, Heidelberg, and Madrid, the Max-Planck-Institut fur Astronomie Heidelberg, Institutes Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas in Barcelona, Granada, and Madrid, Thuringer Landessternwarte, Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, and Calar-Alto Observatory.
Source: University of Gottingen [June 18, 2019]








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