Earth-like planets found raising hopes of extraterrestial life

By Xinhua

Beijing : Scientists have found some earth-like panets that orbit many sun-like stars in our galaxy, increasing hopes of finding extraterrestial life on some of them, media reported Monday.


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University of Arizona astronomer Michael Meyer, working with NASA’s Spitzer space telescope, said his research shows that between 20 percent and 60 percent of stars similar to our sun have conditions favorable for forming rocky planets like Earth.

“To study the evolution of gas and dust around sun-like stars is to understand the formation and evolution of planetary systems,” said Meyer. “If we were thinking of what life could emerge around other stars, we might want to know how common rocky planets like Earth might be”.

But he said a lot more research is needed to pin down the prospects for extraterrestial life somewhere in the universe.

“What we need is much more data, more missions, more observations to inform what we hope will become a predicted theory of planet formation that we can use to guide our search for life in the universe,” Meyer said.

The astronomer and his team of scientists studied six groups of stars — all similar to our sun and sorted by age — with the youngest being between 10 and 30 million years old and the oldest between a billion and three billion years old.

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