Scientists discover super-Earth exoplanets are more common in the universe than we thought
Astronomers have discovered that "super-Earth" planets may exist on wider orbits than previously thought — and this implies these rocky, or "terrestrial," worlds are far more common than was suspected. Super-Earths, in short, are planets with masses up to 10 times that of our planet, but still less than the masses of gas giant planets.
The discovery came after a small extrasolar planet, or "exoplanet," in a wide orbit around its star was discovered, courtesy of a gravitational "microlensing" event designated OGLE-2016-BLG-0007. This event indicated the exoplanet had a planet-to-star mass ratio that roughly doubles the Earth-sun mass ratio.
"We found a small planet in an orbit similar to Saturn's. This planet is part of a larger sample that shows super-Earth planets between the orbits of Earth and Saturn are abundant," team member Jennifer Yee of the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian told Space.com. "The abundance of super-Earths was a surprise."
Yee explained that scientists previously knew from data delivered by the Kepler space telescope mission that super-Earths are common around other stars, but only within a distance from their respective stars equivalent to the distance between Earth and the sun. That expected distance is represented by one astronomical unit (au). This new work, however, shows that super-Earths are also common at larger distances from their host stars, in this case around 10 au (or 10 times the distance between our planet and the sun).
"Previously, there were only upper limits on the numbers of super-Earths [in wide orbits], and there was a suggestion that they might not exist at all," Yee continued.
When factoring in this super-Earth data, the team calculated that there should be around 0.35 super-Earth planets per star on wide Jupiter-like orbits. Yee explained that the overall distribution of planetary mass ratios could reflect the specifics of planet formation processes. "Specifically, the distribution suggests that the planets can be separated into two populations, one of super-Earths and Neptunes and one of more massive gas giant planets," Yee added. The team suspects this division in populations reflects the differences in formation processes between terrestrial planets and massive gas giant worlds.Discovering a larger population of super-Earths in Jupiter-like and Saturn-like orbits could also have implications for our understanding of so-called "habitable zones" around other stars.
Habitable zones are defined as regions around stars that are temperate enough to allow liquid water to exist at the surfaces of terrestrial planets within the area. Any closer to a star than its habitable zone band, and a planet's liquid water evaporates. Further away, it freezes.
This is why habitable zones are also called "Goldilocks zones" (like the perfect bear's porridge, liquid water is neither too hot nor too cold in these zones).
Though Jupiter and Saturn are outside the solar system's habitable zone, super-Earths in similar orbits around hotter stars could fit within such regions — if they are extended.
"The habitable zone region where we expect to find life in other planetary systems is extremely narrow. Our expectations regarding this zone have been driven by our own planet because that is the only place where we have definitively detected life, so far," Yee said. "Nature continuously surprises us."Yee added that the best way to understand the habitable zone region around stars in general is to measure the properties of the larger planet population.
"This gives more room for the unexpected," Yee said. "This measurement of the super-Earth population provides a new piece of the habitable zone picture, which will ultimately contribute to our characterization of the population of Earth-like planets."
Yee and colleagues made this discovery using the Korea Microlensing Telescope Network (KMTNet), consisting of three sites in Chile, South Africa and Australia. The three telescopes in three different time zones mean KMTNet can allow astronomers to monitor the night sky uninterrupted over the southern hemisphere.
"This discovery of this planet wasn't a surprise because KMTNet was designed to do this, but it is extremely exciting because it proves KMTNet is capable of routinely finding smaller planets, which is a requirement for understanding planet populations," Yee explained.KMTNet hunts exoplanets using a phenomenon first predicted by Albert Einstein in his 1915 theory of gravity, general relativity.
General relativity suggests objects with mass cause the fabric of space and time to "warp," with gravity arising from this curvature. When light passes by this curvature, its light gets curved, too. That means when a body of mass comes between Earth and a background light source, the image of that source is warped, magnified, or even multiplied upon reaching our instruments. A planetary system acting as a gravitational lens and coming between Earth and a background source can cause a tiny distortion in that source, a situation called "microlensing."
"It is a funny coincidence of physics," Yee said. "Microlensing is good at finding planets near the Einstein radius [the characteristic angle for gravitational lensing]."This radius is set by the mass of the lensing planetary system, including its star, the distance from Earth to that lens system, and the distance from Earth to the background source whose light is distorted. "In fact, it was the realization of this coincidence in the early 1990s that led to the first microlensing planet searches," Yee added.
Related Stories:
— Scientists discover bizarre double-star system with exoplanet on a sideways orbit (video)
— Does exoplanet K2-18b host alien life or not? Here's why the debate continues
— Earth-size planet discovered around cool red dwarf star shares its name with a biscuit
The team will now continue to use KMTNet and gravitational lensing to hunt for lensing planetary systems in an attempt to discover more super-Earths in wide orbits.
"We are working on increasing the size of the planet sample by including more seasons of KMTNet data in the analysis," Yee concluded. "We are also working on improving the quality of the data reductions to allow us to find weaker planetary signals."The team's research was published on Thursday (April 24) in the journal Science.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Geek Tyrant
8 hours ago
- Geek Tyrant
ALIEN: EARTH Video Teases Mysterious Link Between New Character and Franchise Legacy — GeekTyrant
Alien: Earth is just around the corner, and fans of the Alien universe are about to dive into a terrifying new chapter that connects back to one of the biggest power players in the franchise… Weyland-Yutani. A new promo video just dropped, and it puts the spotlight on one of the series' most intriguing new characters, a corporate leader with a wild agenda that could shake up everything we thought we knew. Set years before the events of Alien , the upcoming FX series explores the early days of the corporate arms race that would shape the future of humanity. While Alien introduced Weyland-Yutani as the shadowy force pulling the strings from behind the scenes, Alien: Earth will widen the scope to show the company fighting for dominance against other hungry players like Lynch, Dynamic, Threshold, and Prodigy. Prodigy is led by the enigmatic and eccentric Boy Kavalier, played by Samuel Blenkin, and this video gives us a taste of what to expect form the character. In the teaser, Kavalier addresses the competition: 'I'd be lying if I said I wasn't aware of Weyland-Yutani. Everyone in this game is. But I don't emulate them. I don't envy them. I don't fear them. I think they're playing catch-up.' That's a bold claim in a universe where Weyland-Yutani has always played god with human lives, but Kavalier might have something to back it up. Prodigy's breakthrough is wild as they're transferring human consciousness into synthetics, essentially creating a new form of sentient life. A catastrophic crash near Prodigy City brings chaos and horror, as alien monsters are unleashed into the world. That's when we meet Wendy, played by Sydney Chandler, the first human-synthetic hybrid. She takes charge, leading other synthetics in a desperate hunt to eliminate the alien threat. But this wouldn't be an Alien story without a deadly twist — there's a Xenomorph in the mix, and it's not going down without taking a few heads with it. Kavalier's motives also remain murky. While Wendy and the others fight to survive, he seems more interested in capturing the alien than saving his creations. That obsession could spell doom for everyone involved. Alongside Blenkin and Chandler, Alien: Earth features a solid cast including Timothy Olyphant as Kirsh, Alex Lawther as CJ, Lily Newmark as Nibs, and Essie Davis as Dame Silva. The series is created by Noah Hawley, with Ridley Scott producing. Alien: Earth premieres with its first two episodes on FX and Hulu on August 12.


Boston Globe
9 hours ago
- Boston Globe
When Earth's surface shifts, a new satellite will see it
At the mission control center, the reaction was jubilation. The visitors' gallery there included a few thousand students, and tens of thousands of people watched online. 'This success is demonstrating teamwork, international teamwork between two space-faring nations,' V. Narayanan, chair of the Indian Space Research Organization, or ISRO, said after the launch. Advertisement Casey Swails, NASA's deputy associate administrator, followed with equally complimentary remarks. 'This Earth science mission is one of a kind and really shows the world what our two nations can do,' she said. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up The satellite is known as the NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar mission, or NISAR. NASA describes it as the most advanced radar system it has ever launched. Because radar signals pass through clouds, they are ideal for monitoring Earth's surface. 'We can see through day or night, rain or shine,' Paul Siqueira, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and the ecosystems lead for NISAR, said in an interview. Deformations in Earth's surface could provide early warning of impending natural disasters like volcanic eruptions and landslides. Measurements of ice sheets will reveal which areas are melting and which are growing through accumulated snowfall. Advertisement The data could also reveal flooded areas that would otherwise be hidden by bad weather, providing help to rescue teams. The satellite could have helped after the magnitude 8.8 earthquake off Russia's Far East coast Wednesday and the subsequent tsunami. The satellite at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 2023. Mario Tama/Photographer: Mario Tama/Getty I 'It's these types of events that remind us how important the types of measurements that NISAR will be making will be,' Sue Owen, deputy chief scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said during the launch coverage. 'They will help us to be able to forecast where these types of events occur, as well as assess the damage after these earthquakes and tsunamis.' The first 90 days will be devoted to deploying the spacecraft, including extending a 39-foot-wide gold-plated-mesh antenna reflector, which looks a bit like a giant beach umbrella, testing the instruments and performing initial observations. The primary mission is scheduled to last three years. If the spacecraft is still operational at that point, it will have enough propellant left to continue for another couple of years. The underlying technology, known as synthetic aperture radar, has been used in space for decades. Sending and receiving multiple radar pulses simulates a much larger antenna, allowing smaller features on the ground to be observed. A synthetic-aperture radar instrument that flew on NASA's space shuttle Endeavour in 1994, for example, surveyed a buried 'lost city' on the Arabian Peninsula and searched for centuries-old ruins along the Silk Road in western China. An artist's concept of the satellite in Earth orbit. ISRO/NASA/NYT What is different about NISAR is that it will bounce radar waves off almost all of Earth's surface and will do so repeatedly -- twice every 12 days. Advertisement That will allow scientists to detect slight changes like slow-motion landslides, and monitor places like Antarctica that are distant and inhospitable. NISAR 'will cover all of Antarctica for the first time,' Eric Rignot, a glaciologist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, said during NASA's launch coverage. 'Conducting these measurements in the Antarctic would be nearly impossible for ground parties, because the continent is so vast.' The NISAR data will track the motion of glaciers and ice sheets. 'Scientists will be able to use this information in climate models to project what sea level would look like in the next few years, in the next decades, in the next century, so we can better protect society and save human lives, too,' Rignot said. Siqueira said NISAR could provide practical information closer to home, tracking the growth of crops. The launch from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, India, on July 30. R. Parthibhan/Associated Press Microwaves bounce off water, so a field of healthy plants will appear brighter. 'If a plant is desiccated, it'll be more radar transparent,' Siqueira said. The main part of the spacecraft is 18 feet long and weighs more than 5,000 pounds. Two 18-foot-long solar arrays will generate power. The satellite includes two radar systems. One, built by NASA, will transmit microwaves with a wavelength of 10 inches. The other, built by ISRO, transmits 4-inch-long microwaves. The two wavelengths will provide details at different size scales. For the study of vegetation, the shorter wavelengths will provide more detail about bushes and shrubs, while the longer wavelengths will provide a clearer picture of taller plants like trees. The amount of data will be almost overwhelming -- terabytes every day. One challenge in designing the mission was figuring out how to send that much data to the ground and then how to process it. Advertisement 'The sheer volume of data that NISAR is collecting actually pushed NASA into managing data in the cloud,' Gerald Bawden, the mission's program scientist, said during a news conference last week. The idea for a mission like NISAR dates back to a recommendation that appeared in a once-a-decade report by earth scientists that lays out the field's top priorities for observing Earth from space. NASA looked for an international partner to share the work and cost and finally found one in India in 2014. NASA's share of the mission cost $1.2 billion, and ISRO's contribution was comparable, NASA officials said. Collaboration with India in space has increased in recent years. An Indian astronaut, Shubhanshu Shukla, flew on the private Axiom-4 mission to the International Space Station in June, spending 18 days there. During a meeting at the White House in February, Narendra Modi, India's prime minister, and President Donald Trump had called for more collaboration in space exploration. No additional collaborations like NISAR have been announced yet. This article originally appeared in


CNET
9 hours ago
- CNET
Earth Is Spinning Weirdly Faster, Making This Tuesday One of the Shortest Days Ever
Earth's rotation is randomly speeding up, and nobody is quite sure why. These speedups, which have occurred several times over the last few years, haven't had any effect on daily life, but they also haven't gone unnoticed by science. Tuesday, Aug. 5 is the next date when Earth's rotation is expected to speed up, shortening the day by between 1.25 and 1.51 milliseconds. According to Time and Date, the current prediction is set by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service and the US Naval Observatory. The original prediction was 1.51 milliseconds, but it's since been updated to 1.25 milliseconds. This is also the third time Earth's rotation has sped up for a day this summer. The other two instances occurred on July 10 and July 22. Should the first prediction be accurate, Aug. 5, 2025, will be the third shortest day on record behind June 30, 2022, when the Earth spun 1.59 milliseconds faster, and July 5, 2024, when it completed its rotation 1.66 milliseconds faster. If the prediction is off, then it may succeed those two as the shortest day Earth has seen in recorded history. For reference, Earth generally takes approximately 86,400 seconds to make one full rotation. One millisecond is 0.001 seconds. So, this won't be noticeable to humans and will not affect anything. What's causing Earth to spin faster? There are numerous reasons why Earth could be spinning faster. The prevailing opinion is that it's due to the moon's current position over Earth. When the moon is further north or south than Earth's equator, it can impact how fast the planet spins. On Aug. 5, 2025, the moon will be quite a bit further south than the equator, which is likely causing the slightly faster spin. This is expected to have a short-term impact on Earth's orbit. Science can't explain it Scientists are puzzling over why Earth is speeding up at all. Approximately 245 million years ago, the dinosaurs roamed, and days were an hour and a half shorter than they are today. Earth's rotation has been slowing ever since, mostly due to the moon's impact on Earth's oceans. Science has measured Earth's rotation subtly slowing down since official records began in 1973. However, a recent trend shows that Earth's rotation is speeding up, and since these faster days are mostly explained by the moon's orbit, science has yet to fully explain why. A research paper posted in Nature in 2023 suggests that Earth's core may have started slowing down as recently as 2010, which would explain Earth's faster rotation. However, confirmation doesn't yet exist.