The exoplanet Kepler-138 b, shown here in an artist's view, is the first alien planet smaller than the Earth with both its mass and size measured. The planet, found with NASA's Kepler space telescope, orbits a red dwarf star 200 light-years from Earth.
A Mars-size planet about 200 light-years from our solar system has turned out to be the lightest known alien world orbiting a normal star, researchers say.
Astronomers made the discovery after measuring the size and mass of the baking-hot planet, named Kepler-138 b, which orbits a red dwarf star called Kepler-138. Since Mars is only 53 percent the size of the Earth (or just about half the size), so .
In the past couple of decades, astronomers have confirmed the existence ofmore than 1,800 , or planets orbiting a star other than our sun. However, it's more difficult for scientists to calculate the masses of small, rocky planets like Mars or Mercury than for large, gaseous worlds such as Jupiter or Saturn. Scientists measure the masses of exoplanets by looking at how strongly their gravitational fields tug on their stars; small planets have small masses, and their weak tugs on their stars are more difficult for astronomers to detect. As such, few Earth-size exoplanets have had their masses measured. []
In this new , astronomers investigated Kepler-138, a cold, dim red dwarf star with a mass about half that of the sun. Kepler-138 is located about 200 light-years from Earth, in the constellation Lyra.
Kepler-138 "is more than 10 million times further away from us than our sun," study lead author Daniel Jontof-Hutter, an astronomer at Pennsylvania State in University Park, told .
Using , the researchers looked at how the gravitational tug-of-war among these exoplanets influenced the lengths of their orbits. Because the strength of a planet's gravitational pull is directly related to its mass, the scientists were able to weigh all three of these planets.
The least massive known alien world may be the , which has an estimated mass only about one-fiftieth, or 2 percent, that of Earth. However, that world does not orbit a normal star, but instead circles a pulsar—a dense, rapidly spinning remnant of a supernova explosion.
Although Kepler-138 b may be similar in mass and width to Mars, it is so much closer to its star, and thus hotter, meaning it is likely very different from Mars, Jontof-Hutter said. "In fact, all three planets orbiting Kepler-138 are likely too hot to retain liquid water," Jontof-Hutter said. On each of those planets, surface temperatures can reach about 960 Fahrenheit (515 degrees Celsius).
Kepler-138 c and Kepler-138 d have masses 197 percent and 64 percent of Earth's, respectively.
This finding opens up the study of rocky alien planets smaller than Earth, Jontof-Hutter said.
"The that have been discovered by Kepler show us that systems like our own solar system are probably not the norm, and we don't know why," Jontof-Hutter said. more exoplanets "will give us clues about how planets form and enable us to learn how common systems like are own really are."
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