
A team of researchers has found what they believed is the oldest
Earth-sized planet in the Milky Way, orbiting a star around 117
light-years away.
The star system, known as KOI-3158, was observed by NASA’s Kepler
telescope, and contains five planets similar in size to Earth, with
K3158.05 being the closest to our home planet.
Interestingly, the star system is estimated to be around 11.2 billion
years old (give or take 900 million years) – this makes it the oldest
system known to contain Earth-sized planets in our galaxy, and suggests
that Earth-like planets formed throughout the history of the Universe.
To put that into perspective, our own Solar System is only thought to be less than 5 billion years old.
But what the scientists find most interesting is that the star in
KOI-3158 is iron-poor. This is surprising, as most stars hosting small,
Earth-sized planets are rich in metals, and this was thought to be one
of the criteria needed for “sweet spot” planets to form.
“That implies that Earth-sized planets may have readily formed at
earlier epochs in the Universe’s history when metals were more scarce,”
said Tiago Campante, an asteroseismologist from the University of
Birmingham in the Uk who led the research, in a talk given at a
symposium in France in July.
“KOI-3158, a system of terrestrial-sized planets, formed when the
Universe was less than 20 percent of its current age, so that suggests
that Earth-sized planets may have formed throughout most of the
Universe’s history, leaving open the possibility for the existence of
ancient life in the galaxy.”
Although the planets orbiting the star in KOI-3158 are similar in
size to those in our Solar System – they roughly range between the sizes
of Mercury and Venus – the whole system is super compact, with the
closest planet having an orbit of less than 10 days.
The diagram below show how KOI-3158 compares to our own Solar System,
as well as some of the other Kepler-discovered systems out there.
As Eric Mack writes for Gizmag, there’s no way to know at the moment
if any of the planets in the star system hosted life at some point……
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