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Электронная библиотека астронома-любителя. Книги по астрономии, телескопостроению, оптике.
Дата: 16 января 1999 (1999-01-16)
От: Greg Jarikov
Тема: Reuters: New Zealand Scientists Discover Planet that May Host Life
NEW ZEALAND SCIENTISTS DISCOVER PLANET THAT MAY HOST LIFE
Source: Reuters via Today's News Network - New Zealand,
http://www.xtra.co.nz/newsfeed/reuter/story42.html
02:50 GMT WELLINGTON, Jan 12 (Reuters) - An international team of scientists
has discovered an Earth-size planet in the middle of the Milky Way believed
to have the potential to support life, a New Zealand member of the group said
on Tuesday.
"It has a probable mass range between that of the Earth and that of the
planet Neptune. Probably it would be a little bit heavier than the Earth,"
researcher Ian Bond said.
Auckland University fellow Bond said by telephone from the Mount John
observatory in New Zealand's South Island that the planet was the right
distance from the nearest star to sustain life.
"It will be something like between one to four astronomical units, which
places it in a promising region," he said.
An astronomical unit is calculated to be the mean distance between the
centre of the earth and the centre of the sun.
A team of New Zealand and Japanese astronomers, working with Australian and
U.S. partners observing from Australia's Mount Stromlo, discovered the planet
last July.
They presented their findings at an American Astronomical Society meeting
in the United States over the weekend.
The two teams used a relatively new technique called gravitational
microlensing, which essentially uses the chance alignment of dim and bright
stars to detect potential planets.
"This is the first discovery using the microlensing technique. It's the
only technique that is sensitive to earth-size planets," Bond said.
The planet, which is around 30,000 light years away, cannot be seen
directly and there was no way of confirming whether it has water or any of
the elements that may support life, he added.
Bond, with Auckland University Associate Professor Philip Yock and Japanese
astronomers, will resume stargazing around the Milky Way in April for more
extrasolar planets.
There are at least 17 known planets outside the solar system, but few are
believed to be capable of sustaining life.
The joint New Zealand-Japanese team is funded by both governments.
(C) Reuters Limited 1999
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