It’s been 30 years since the discovery of the
first planet around another star like our Sun. With every new discovery,
scientists move closer to answering whether there are other planets like Earth
that could host life as we know it. NASA/JPL-Caltech
The milestone highlights the
accelerating rate of discoveries, just over three decades since the first
exoplanets were found.
The official number of exoplanets —
planets outside our solar system — tracked by NASA has reached 6,000. Confirmed
planets are added to the count on a rolling basis by scientists from around the
world, so no single planet is considered the 6,000th entry. The number is
monitored by NASA’s Exoplanet Science Institute (NExScI), based at Caltech’s
IPAC in Pasadena, California. There are more than 8,000 additional candidate
planets awaiting confirmation, with NASA leading the world in searching for
life in the universe.
See NASA's
Exoplanet Discoveries Dashboard
“This milestone represents decades of cosmic exploration driven by NASA space telescopes — exploration that has completely changed the way humanity views the night sky,” said Shawn Domagal-Goldman, acting director, Astrophysics Division, NASA Headquarters in Washington. “Step by step, from discovery to characterization, NASA missions have built the foundation to answering a fundamental question: Are we alone? Now, with our upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope and Habitable Worlds Observatory, America will lead the next giant leap — studying worlds like our own around stars like our Sun. This is American ingenuity, and a promise of discovery that unites us all.”
Scientists have found thousands of exoplanets (planets
outside our solar system) throughout the galaxy. Most can be studied only
indirectly, but scientists know they vary widely, as depicted in this artist’s
concept, from small, rocky worlds and gas giants to water-rich planets and
those as hot as stars.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
The milestone comes 30 years after the first exoplanet was discovered around a star similar to our Sun, in 1995. (Prior to that, a few planets had been identified around stars that had burned all their fuel and
collapsed.) Although researchers think there are billions of planets in the Milky Way galaxy, finding them remains a challenge. In
addition to discovering many individual planets with fascinating
characteristics as the total number of known exoplanets climbs, scientists are able to see how the
general planet population compares to the planets of our own solar system.
For example, while our solar system
hosts an equal number of rocky and giant planets, rocky planets appear to be
more common in the universe. Researchers have also found a range of planets
entirely different from those in our solar system. There are Jupiter-size
planets that orbit closer to their parent star than Mercury orbits the Sun; planets that orbit two stars, no stars, and dead stars; planets covered in lava; some with the density
of Styrofoam; and others with clouds made of gemstones.
“Each of the different types of
planets we discover gives us information about the conditions under which
planets can form and, ultimately, how common planets like Earth might be, and
where we should be looking for them,” said Dawn Gelino, head of NASA’s
Exoplanet Exploration Program (ExEP), located at the agency’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Southern California. “If we want to find out if we’re alone in
the universe, all of this knowledge is essential.”
Searching for
other worlds
Fewer than 100 exoplanets have
been directly imaged, because most planets are so faint they get lost in the light from their
parent star. The other four methods of planet detection are indirect. With the transit method, for
instance, astronomers look for a star to dim for a short period as an orbiting
planet passes in front of it.
To account for the possibility that
something other than an exoplanet is responsible for a particular signal, most
exoplanet candidates must be confirmed by follow-up observations, often using
an additional telescope, and that takes time. That’s why there is a long list
of candidates in the NASA Exoplanet Archive (hosted by NExScI) waiting to be confirmed.
“We really need the whole community
working together if we want to maximize our investments in these missions that
are churning out exoplanets candidates,” said Aurora Kesseli, the deputy
science lead for the NASA Exoplanet Archive at IPAC. “A big part of what we do at
NExScI is build tools that
help the community go out and turn candidate planets into confirmed planets.”
The rate of exoplanet discoveries has accelerated in recent years (the database reached 5,000 confirmed exoplanets just three years ago), and this trend seems likely to continue. Kesseli and her colleagues anticipate receiving thousands of additional exoplanet candidates from the ESA (European Space Agency) Gaia mission, which finds planets through a technique called astrometry, and NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, which will discover thousands of new exoplanets primarily through a technique called gravitational microlensing.
Many telescopes contribute to the search for and study
of exoplanets, including some in space (artists concepts shown here) and on the
ground. Doing the work are organizations around the world, including ESA
(European Space Agency), CSA (Canadian Space Agency), and NSF (National Science
Foundation).
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Future exoplanets
At NASA, the future of exoplanet
science will emphasize finding rocky planets similar to Earth and studying
their atmospheres for biosignatures — any characteristic, element, molecule, substance, or feature that
can be used as evidence of past or present life. NASA’s James Webb Space
Telescope has already analyzed the chemistry of over 100 exoplanet atmospheres.
But studying the atmospheres of
planets the size and temperature of Earth will require new technology.
Specifically, scientists need better tools to block the glare of the star a
planet orbits. And in the case of an Earth-like planet, the glare would be significant:
The Sun is about 10 billion times brighter than Earth — which would be more than enough to
drown out our home planet’s light if viewed by a distant observer.
NASA has two main initiatives to
try overcoming this hurdle. The Roman telescope will carry a technology
demonstration instrument called the Roman Coronagraph that will test new technologies for blocking
starlight and
making faint planets visible. At its peak performance, the coronagraph should
be able to directly image a planet the size and temperature of Jupiter orbiting
a star like our Sun, and at a similar distance from that star. With its
microlensing survey and coronagraphic observations, Roman will reveal new
details about the diversity of planetary systems, showing how common solar
systems like our own may be across the galaxy.
Additional advances in coronagraph
technology will be needed to build a coronagraph that can detect a planet like
Earth. NASA is working on a concept for such a mission, currently named the
Habitable Worlds Observatory.
More about
ExEP, NExScI
NASA’s Exoplanet Exploration
Program is responsible for implementing the agency’s plans for the discovery
and understanding of planetary systems around nearby stars. It acts as a focal
point for exoplanet science and technology and integrates cohesive strategies
for future discoveries. The science operations and analysis center for ExEP is
NExScI, based at IPAC, a science and data center for astrophysics and planetary
science at Caltech. JPL is managed
by Caltech for NASA.
Source: NASA’s Tally of Planets Outside Our Solar System Reaches 6,000 - NASA
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