PARIS: An international team of scientists said Monday they had discovered a trio of Earth-like planets that are the best bet so far for finding life outside our solar system.
The three orbit an ultracool dwarf star a mere 39 light years away, and are likely comparable in size and temperature to Earth and Venus, they reported in a study, published in Nature.
“This is the first opportunity to find chemical traces of life outside our solar system,” said lead author Michael Gillon, an astrophysicist at the University of Liege in Belgium.
All three planets had the “winning combination” of being similar in size to Earth, “potentially habitable” and close enough so their atmospheres can be analyzed with current technology, he told AFP.
The find opens up a whole new “hunting ground” for habitable planets, he added.
Gillon and colleagues calibrated a 60-centimeter (23.5-inch) telescope in Chile, known as TRAPPIST, to track several dozen dwarf stars neither big nor hot enough to be visible with optical telescopes.
They zeroed in on a particularly promising one — now known as TRAPPIST-1 — about one eighth the size of the Sun, and significantly cooler.
Observing it for months, the astronomers noticed that its infrared signal faded slightly at regular intervals, evidence of objects in orbit.
Further analysis confirmed they were exoplanets — planets revolving around stars outside our solar system.
The innermost two circle their dwarf star every 1.5 and 2.4 days, though they are hit with only four and two times the amount of heat-generating radiation that Earth receives from the Sun.
The more distant orbit of the third planet takes between four and 73 days, according to the study.
“So far, the existence of such ‘red worlds’ orbiting ultra-cool dwarf stars was purely theoretical, but now we have not just one lonely planet but three,” said co-author Emmanuel Jehin, also from the University of Liege.
He called the discovery a “paradigm shift” in the search for life elsewhere in the universe.
Given their size and proximity to their low-intensity star, all three planets may have regions at temperatures within a range suitable for sustaining liquid water and life, the study concluded.
Their proximity to Earth means scientists will be able to find out a lot more.
“These planets are so close, and their star so small, we can study their atmosphere and composition,” said co-author Julien de Wit, a postdoc at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT.)
“This is a jackpot for the field,” he said in a statement, adding that it should be possible to determine if they harbor life “within our generation.”
Up to now, the search for Earth-like orbs in our Galaxy and beyond centered on stars like our Sun, more massive and hotter than the dwarf around which the newly-discovered worlds orbit.
But the discovery suggests that a significant fraction of ultracool dwarfs hold potentially habitable planets in their gravitational sway.
“At the scale of the Galaxy, this means billions of additional places where life might have developed,” Gillon said.
The mass of the three planets circling TRAPPIST-1 cannot be less than 50 percent of that of Earth, and are probably not more than double, he added.
“They could be richer or poorer in water and rocks than our planet, and if they have an atmosphere, it is probably very different that ours.”
To give rise to life as we know it, planets have to be in a “Goldilocks zone” in relation to their star, far enough away so that its heat doesn’t evaporate all the water, but close enough so that it can exist in liquid form.
Building and using the TRAPPIST infrared telescope to hunt for planets was a risky strategy.
“It’s not looking at 100,000 stars at a time, like the Kepler Space Telescope,” de Wit said. “It is few of them that you’re spending time on, one at a time.”
“And one paid off,” he added.
Scientists discover three ‘potentially habitable’ planets
Scientists discover three ‘potentially habitable’ planets
Apple to update EU browser options, make more apps deletable
- iPhone maker came under pressure from regulators to make changes after the EU’s sweeping Digital Markets Act took effect on March 7
- Apple users will be able to select a default browser directly from the choice screen after going through a mandatory list of options
STOCKHOLM: Apple will change how users choose browser options in the European Union, add a dedicated section for changing default apps, and make more apps deletable, the company said on Thursday.
The iPhone maker came under pressure from regulators to make changes after the EU’s sweeping Digital Markets Act took effect on March 7, forcing big tech companies to offer mobile users the ability to select from a list of available web browsers on a “choice screen.”
The new rules require mobile software makers to show the choice screen where users can select a browser, search engine and virtual assistant as they set up their phones, which earlier came with preferred options from Apple and Google.
In an update later this year, Apple users will be able to select a default browser directly from the choice screen after going through a mandatory list of options.
A randomly ordered list of 12 browsers per EU country will be shown to the user with short descriptions, and the chosen one will be automatically downloaded, Apple said. The choice screen will also be available on iPads through an update later this year.
Apple released a previous update in response to the new rules in March, but browser companies criticized the design of its choice screen, and the Commission opened an investigation on March 25 saying it suspected that the measures fell short of effective compliance.
The company said it has been in dialogue with the European Commission and believes the new changes will address regulators’ concerns.
It also plans to introduce a dedicated area for default apps where a user will be able to set defaults for messaging, phone calls, spam filters, password managers and keyboards.
Users will also be able to delete certain Apple-made apps such as App Store, Messages, Camera, Photos and Safari. Only Settings and Phone apps would not be deletable.









