TRAPPIST 2.0? Scientists discover four Earth-sized planets orbiting Sun-like star

New Delhi: After one of NASA’s biggest revelations about a whole new solar system consisting of seven Earth-like exoplanets orbiting a single star – TRAPPIST-1 – scientists have once again discovered a similar existence.

Lying approximately 12 light-years away, where they are visible to the naked eye, are four Earth-sized planets orbiting the nearest Sun-like star.

Two of the planets are super-Earths located in the habitable zone of the star, tau Ceti, meaning they could support liquid surface water, said researchers at University of California (UC), Santa Cruz in the US.

The planets have masses as low as 1.7 Earth mass, making them among the smallest planets ever detected around nearby Sun-like stars, they said.

They were detected by observing the wobbles in the movement of tau Ceti. This required techniques sensitive enough to detect variations in the movement of the star as small as 30 centimetres per second.

“Our detection of such weak wobbles is a milestone in the search for Earth analogs and the understanding of the Earth’s habitability through comparison with these analogs,” said Fabo Feng from the University of Hertfordshire in the UK.

“We have introduced new methods to remove the noise in the data in order to reveal the weak planetary signals,” said Feng, lead author of the study published in the Astrophysical Journal.

The outer two planets around tau Ceti are likely to be candidate habitable worlds, although a massive debris disc around the star probably reduces their habitability due to intensive bombardment by asteroids and comets.

“We are slowly learning to tell the difference between wobbles caused by planets and those caused by stellar active surface. This enabled us to essentially verify the existence of the two outer, potentially habitable planets in the system,” said Mikko Tuomi from the University of Hertfordshire.

Sun-like stars are thought to be the best targets in the search for habitable Earth-like planets due to their similarity to the Sun, researchers said.

Unlike more common smaller stars, such as the red dwarf stars Proxima Centauri and TRAPPIST-1, they are not so faint that planets would be tidally locked, showing the same side to the star at all times.

Tau Ceti is very similar to the Sun in its size and brightness, and both stars host multi-planet systems.

PTI