AG百家乐在线官网

'Super-Earth' planet found 20 light years away could be able to host life

Found by Dr Michael Cretignier of the University of Oxford, the planet has a mass six times greater than Earth's and orbits in a "habitable zone" of a star similar to the sun.

Image of HD 20794 d, a planet found 20 light-years away which could have conditions for life. Pic: Gabriel P茅rez D铆az, SMM (IAC) / PA
Image: Scientists said a planet found 20 light-years away could have conditions for life. Pic: Gabriel P茅rez D铆az, SMM (IAC)/PA
Why you can trust Sky News

A "super-Earth" planet found outside of our solar system could have conditions suitable for life, according to experts at the University of Oxford.

Researchers said the planet has a mass six times greater than our Earth's and orbits in a "habitable zone" of a star similar to the sun.

While located 20 light-years away, scientists believe the planet - named HD 20794 d - could be at the right distance from its star to sustain water on its surface.

Dr Michael Cretignier, postdoctoral research assistant at the university's physics department, said: "Excitingly, its proximity with us means there is hope for future space missions to obtain an image of it."

However, because HD 20794 d orbits in an elliptical way, rather than circular like the Earth, it is unclear whether it would be able to host life.

Pic: Gabriel P茅rez D铆az, SMM (IAC) / PA
Image: HD 20794 d sits in a 'habitable zone'. Pic: Gabriel P茅rez D铆az, SMM (IAC)/PA

It was first identified by Dr Cretignier in 2022 after he found a possible signal while analysing archived data recorded by the High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher spectrograph at the La Silla Observatory in Chile.

An international team of researchers then analysed two decades of observations to confirm the discovery of HD 20794 d.

Read more:
Icy craters and sunlit plains seen on Pluto
NASA's stuck astronaut steps out for spacewalk

Be the first to get Breaking News

Install the Sky News app for free

"For me, it was naturally a huge joy when we could confirm the planet's existence," Dr Cretignier said.

"It was also a relief, since the original signal was at the edge of the spectrograph's detection limit, so it was hard to be completely convinced at that time if the signal was real or not."

Get Sky News on WhatsApp
Get Sky News on WhatsApp

Follow our channel and never miss an update.

He added the planet "could play a pivotal role in future missions" hoping to "search for biosignatures indicating potential life" on planets far away from our own.

"I'm now very enthusiastic to hear what other scientists can tell us about this newly discovered planet, particularly since it is among the closest Earth-analogues we know about and given its peculiar orbit," he said.

The findings were published in .