The
existential notion of Earth-sized inhabitable exoplanets seems to be
confronting our conventional understanding of the vast cosmos. However, the
observations made by the Kepler spacecraft infer that one out of every five
sun-like stars house an Earth-like planet within its “habitable zone” — area of
space appropriately distanced from its host star likely to be comprising liquid
water.
Observations
made by Kepler, from its first mission, elucidates this possibility with the
cutting-edge discovery of 20 potentially-habitable planets. The study is yet to
be attested with further research and information, nevertheless it already
seems to be quite promising.
Of these 20
exoplanets, many orbit stars like the Sun. Among them, there’s a planet having
the longest orbit and an extensive 395 Earth-day year, while the shortest
orbits its star in 18 Earth-days. Other inhabitable planets orbiting smaller
stars are found to have much shorter “years” than what was found within this
Kepler data.
The planet
with a 395 Earth-day year, called KOI-7923.01, orbiting a star within the
habitable zone, is most likely to have liquid water and harbor certain life-forms.
In the words of Jeff Coughlin, a Kepler team lead, “If you had to choose one to
send a spacecraft to, it’s not a bad option.”
As mentioned
earlier, these 20 planets are yet to be verified as habitable. The expanse
housing these planets had been observed by the Kepler craft for four years, and
because many planets have such long orbits they are likely to have been
observed for once or twice only.
This is also
why, the planets, being observed, were seen during Kepler’s first mission, are
only being announced now. With Hubble Space Telescope we can carry out further
observations in years to come to confirm what we currently contemplate, and
explore these planetary bodies, Coughlin avows.
Scientists
will be able to more legitimately affirm whether these planets, especially
KOI-7923.01, merit our shared ecstasy, when more information is compiled with
the current Kepler’s data. Several inhabitable planets have been found before,
but these planets could hold special astronomic significance.
The director
of the Planetary Habitability Lab at Arecibo Observatory, Abel Mendez, links
the significance of these newly discovered planets to both their Earth-like
orbits and their Sun-like host stars.
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