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SA telescope helped find new planets

The discovery of a new system of seven Earth-sized planets orbiting a star 40 light years away used data from the South African Astronomical Observatory (SAAO) telescope, as well as other instruments around the world.

Three of these planets are located in the star’s “habitable zone”. This means that they could have liquid water on their surface, which increases the chances of them hosting life. This new planetary system now holds the record for the largest number of Earth-sized planets found.

SAAO’s 1m telescope was used to take observations of the planetary system over several nights in June and July 2016. The 1m telescope is equipped with a special camera, called the Sutherland High Speed Optical Camera (SHOC), which can take up to 70 images per second.

”This is a remarkable discovery,” said Dr Amanda Sickafoose, Head of Instrumentation at SAAO. “To find multiple, possibly habitable exoplanets orbiting the same star is exciting. This system is quite different from our Solar System, which also raises new questions.  The SAAO is proud to have played a small role in this advancement in our understanding of planetary systems.”

Other telescopes used in this research include NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope and ground based telescopes in Chile, Morocco, Hawaii and the Canary Islands.

The planets were observed as they moved in front of their host star, called TRAPPIST-1, blocking out its light. By carefully measuring the amount of light blocked out as each planet passes in front of the star, astronomers were able to determine the sizes of the planets and the way in which they orbited TRAPPIST-1.

The researchers, lead by Michaël Gillon of the University of Liège in Belgium, also report that the three planets in the habitable zone are likely to be rocky planets, like the Earth and Mars, Venus and Mercury, making this the system with the  highest number of rocky planets in the habitable zone of their parent star.

All seven planets orbit TRAPPIST-1 at a distance smaller than the the orbit of Mercury, the closet planet to our Sun. The planets are able to orbit so near to TRAPPIST-1 is because it is a small, red dwarf star with temperatures much cooler than the Sun. The full details of this new discovery have been published in the journal Nature.

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