Updated
Updated · Sky at Night Magazine · May 6
Astronomers discover Earth-like planet candidate HD 137010 b using Kepler data
Updated
Updated · Sky at Night Magazine · May 6

Astronomers discover Earth-like planet candidate HD 137010 b using Kepler data

6 articles · Updated · Sky at Night Magazine · May 6
  • Led by Alexander Venner at the Max Planck Institute, the team found the candidate around a bright star 146 light-years away from a single K2 transit.
  • Researchers estimate an orbit of about one year, placing it potentially in the habitable zone, but it remains unconfirmed because only one transit event has been observed.
  • Its host star is brighter than many similar targets, improving follow-up prospects, though definitive confirmation will require more precise future instruments beyond current capabilities.
A promising Earth-like world was spotted once. Why might it take until the 2040s to prove it's really there?
How did a volunteer citizen scientist find a potential Earth-like planet that automated computer programs overlooked?
Why do scientists believe an 'ice cold Earth,' potentially colder than Mars, could still be habitable?