A “super earth” has been discovered orbiting the closest single star to our sun, scientists said on Wednesday, in a breakthrough that could shine a light on Earth’s nearest planetary neighbors.
Astronomers studied Barnard’s Star, a red dwarf just six light years away — practically in our back garden, galactically speaking — and noticed the presence of a “frozen, dimly lit world” at least 3.2 times heavier than Earth.
The planet, known for now as Barnard’s Star b, is the second-nearest to Earth outside the solar system and orbits its host star once every 233 days.
Photo: Reuters / European Southern Observatory / M. Kornmesser
“It’s important because it’s really our next-door neighbor and we like to meet our neighbors in general,” said Ignasi Ribas from the Institute of Space Studies of Catalonia and Spain’s Institute of Space Sciences.
Despite being relatively close to its parent star, the planet receives less than 2 percent of the energy that Earth gets from the sun, and the team estimates it has a surface temperature of minus-170°C — far too cold to support life as we know it.
“It’s definitely not in the habitable zone — no liquid water. If it has any water or gas this is probably in solid form so that’s why we call it frozen,” Ribas said.
In humanity’s bid to map the planets in the night sky, most historic research has focused on brighter, newer stars, which produce more light and increase the chances of scientists noticing anything orbiting them, but since Barnard’s Star is a red dwarf, a small and cooling star probably about twice as old as the sun, it produces relatively little light, making it hard to discern any bodies in its orbit.
To find Barnard’s Star b, Ribas and the team studied more than 20 years’ worth of observations from seven separate instruments.
They then used the Doppler effect to track the impact of its gravitational pull on its parent star.
Astronomers can use this technique to measure a planet’s velocity and, therefore, mass.
“We have all worked very hard on this breakthrough,” said Guillem Anglada Escude from London’s Queen Mary University, who coauthored the study published in the journal Nature.
The team worked with the European Southern Observatory using astronomical instruments so accurate they can detect changes in a star’s velocity as small as 3.5kph — a gentle walking pace.
It is thought that Barnard’s Star is tearing through space at about 500,000kph, making it the fastest-moving known object in the universe.
Ribas said that although stargazers could predict its size and orbit with relative accuracy using the Doppler effect, any attempt at this stage to find out what the new planet looks like would be “guesswork.”
“It’s sort of in a fuzzy area with respect to its properties. We’ve seen planets of this mass be rocky, meaning that it could look like Earth with a solid surface with potentially some atmosphere or some frozen layer on top,” he said. “Or it may be what we call a mini-Neptune, like a scaled-down version of the gas giants of our solar system.”
It might be cold, inhospitable and all but invisible, but the new planet has one thing going for it: It is really close.
The only known exoplanet closer to Earth was discovered in 2016 orbiting one of a cluster of stars in the Alpha Centauri system, just more than four light years away.
“There’s not so many stars in our immediate neighborhood. The investment to find them is expensive,” Ribas said. “It’s really near and therefore if you have the hope — like I do — of eventually seeing these planets to study them in detail we have to start with the immediate ones. It could lead potentially to other discoveries.”
As the sun sets on another scorching Yangon day, the hot and bothered descend on the Myanmar city’s parks, the coolest place to spend an evening during yet another power blackout. A wave of exceptionally hot weather has blasted Southeast Asia this week, sending the mercury to 45°C and prompting thousands of schools to suspend in-person classes. Even before the chaos and conflict unleashed by the military’s 2021 coup, Myanmar’s creaky and outdated electricity grid struggled to keep fans whirling and air conditioners humming during the hot season. Now, infrastructure attacks and dwindling offshore gas reserves mean those who cannot afford expensive diesel
Does Argentine President Javier Milei communicate with a ghost dog whose death he refuses to accept? Forced to respond to questions about his mental health, the president’s office has lashed out at “disrespectful” speculation. Twice this week, presidential spokesman Manuel Adorni was asked about Milei’s English Mastiff, Conan, said to have died seven years ago. Milei, 53, had Conan cloned, and today is believed to own four copies he refers to as “four-legged children.” Or is it five? In an interview with CNN this month, Milei referred to his five dogs, whose faces and names he had engraved on the presidential baton. Conan,
Le Tuan Binh keeps his Moroccan soldier father’s tombstone at his village home north of Hanoi, a treasured reminder of a man whose community in Vietnam has been largely forgotten. Mzid Ben Ali, or “Mohammed” as Binh calls him, was one of tens of thousands of North Africans who served in the French army as it battled to maintain its colonial rule of Indochina. He fought for France against the Viet Minh independence movement in the 1950s, before leaving the military — as either a defector or a captive — and making a life for himself in Vietnam. “It’s very emotional for me,”
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi reaffirmed his pledge to replace India’s religion-based marriage and inheritance laws with a uniform civil code if he returns to office for a third term, a move that some minority groups have opposed. In an interview with the Times of India listing his agenda, Modi said his government would push for making the code a reality. “It is clear that separate laws for communities are detrimental to the health of society,” he said in the interview published yesterday. “We cannot be a nation where one community is progressing with the support of the Constitution while the other