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32 more planets found outside solar system
by Associated Press
Tuesday, October 20, 2009

WASHINGTON — European astronomers have found 32 new planets outside our solar system, adding evidence to the theory that the universe has many places where life could develop.

Scientists using the European Southern Observatory telescope didn’t find any planets quite the size of Earth or any that seemed habitable or even unusual. But their announcement increased the number of planets discovered outside the solar system to more than 400.

Six of the newly found planets are several times bigger than Earth, increasing the population of so-called super-Earths by more than 30 percent. Most planets discovered so far are far bigger, Jupiter-sized or even larger.

Two of the newly discovered planets were as small as five times the size of Earth and one was up to five times larger than Jupiter.

Astronomer Stephane Udry of the University of Geneva said the results support the theory that planet formation is common, especially around the most common types of stars.

“I’m pretty confident that there are Earth-like planets everywhere,” Udry said in a Web-based news briefing from a conference in Portugal. “Nature doesn’t like a vacuum. If there is space to put a planet there, there will be a planet there.”

What astronomers said is especially exciting is that about 40 percent of sun-like stars have planets that are closer to being Earth-sized than the size of Jupiter. Jupiter’s mass is more than 300 times that of Earth’s.

Depending on definitions of the size of super-Earths, the discovery suggests that planets that have a mass similar to Earth’s are “extraordinarily commonplace,” said Alan Boss, an astronomer at the Carnegie Institution of Washington. He was not part of the European team. “The universe must indeed be crowded with habitable worlds.”

Boss said finding 32 planets at once is a record “and it really shows that the Europeans have taken the lead” in finding planets outside the solar system.

The discoveries were made by the High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher, which is an attachment to the European observatory telescope in Chile that looks for slight wobbles in a star’s movements. Those changes would be made by the tug of a planet’s gravity on the star. There are no photos of these planets.

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JAFO October 20, 2009 at 1:05 a.m. (Suggest removal)

i read this on fox news a little while ago, and in the article, they also said that they sent us a mayor. they are wanting their idiot back. they miss him.

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c0uchtime October 20, 2009 at 8:26 p.m. (Suggest removal)

There are hints of wishful thinking snuck into this reporting, since the existence of huge planets, which are the only kind that would make a star (sun) wobble, give no evidence, direct or even indirect, of the existence of earth-sized planets, let alone ones that have water or atmosphere or other ingredients apparently necessary for life as we know it. Not to say they don't exist, in abundance or otherwise. Just to say that we are a long way from having grounds to hope (or dread) that there is intelligent life out there anywhere. Add to this dilemma the cold fact that the light we are seeing from the star (sun) was sent out thousands of years ago and the star itself may have disappeared long ago and the explosion hasn't reached us yet and won't for quite awhile....

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