25 June 2013
 
Star is crowded by super-Earths
By Jonathan Amos Science correspondent, BBC News
 
 An impression of what the sky  might look like from the exoplanet Gliese 
667Cd, looking towards the parent  star and featuring, at top, two other 
nearby stars. One of the newly  discovered planets, Gliese 667Ce, can be seen 
as 
a crescent
 
Scientists have identified three  new planets around a star they already 
suspected of hosting a trio of  worlds. 
It means this relatively nearby star, Gliese 667C, now has three so-called  
super-Earths orbiting in its "habitable zone". 
This is the region where temperatures ought to allow for the possibility of 
 liquid water, although no-one can say for sure what conditions are really 
like  on these planets. 
Gliese 667C is 22 light-years away. 
Astronomers can see it on the sky in the constellation of Scorpius (The  
Scorpion). 
Previous studies of Gliese 667C had established there were very likely  t
hree planets around it, with its habitable zone occupied by one super-Earth -  
an object slightly bigger than our home world, but probably still with a 
rocky  surface. 
Now, a team of astronomers led by Guillem Anglada-Escude of the University  
of Göttingen, Germany, and Mikko Tuomi, of the University of Hertfordshire, 
 UK, has re-examined the system and raised the star's complement of  
planets. 
The researchers used a suite of telescopes including the 3.6m telescope at  
the Silla Observatory in Chile. This incorporates the high-precision _Harps 
 instrument_ 
(http://www.eso.org/sci/facilities/lasilla/instruments/harps.html) . Harps 
employs an indirect method of detection that infers the  
existence of orbiting planets from the way their gravity makes a parent star  
appear to twitch in its motion across the sky. Full  to bursting  
The planets' presence needs to be disentangled from this complex signal but 
 the Harps instrument is recognised as having tremendous success in 
identifying  smaller worlds. 
Gliese 667C is a low-luminosity "M-dwarf" star just over one-third the mass 
 of our Sun. 

This means its habitable zone can be much closer in before temperatures  
make liquid water impossible. The team is now confident that three rocky  
worlds occupy this region at Gilese 667C. 
"Their estimated masses range from 2.7 to 3.8 that of the Earth's," Mikko  
Tuomi told BBC News.  
"However, we can only estimate the physical sizes by assuming certain  
compositions that is, well, only educated guessing.  
"Their orbital periods are 28, 39, and 62 days, which means that they all  
orbit the star closer to its surface than Mercury in our own system. Yet, 
the  estimated surface temperatures enable the existence of liquid water on 
them  because of the low luminosity and low mass of the star." 
These planets are said to completely fill the habitable zone. There are no  
more stable orbits in which to fit another planet. 
That said, the team has found tantalising evidence for what may be another  
rocky world on the inner-edge of the zone. This would be a seventh planet 
in  the system.Fruitful targets  
The planets would need an atmosphere to sustain liquid water on their  
surfaces, but at a distance of more than 200 trillion km, there are no means  
currently to determine what the precise conditions are like or whether life  
would have any chance of establishing itself. 
Nonetheless, Dr Tuomi believes M-dwarf stars are good candidates to go  
hunting for potentially habitable worlds. 
They are small enough that close-in rocky planets will show up well in the  
Harps Doppler spectroscopy data, but they are also dim enough that those  
close-orbiting worlds will not be roasted.  
"This discovery single-handedly demonstrates that low-mass stars can be  
hosts of several potentially habitable planets," explained Dr Tuomi. 
"In practice, it means that we might have to double or treble our estimates 
 for the occurrence rate of habitable-zone planets around M-dwarf stars.  
"There might, in fact, be more habitable-zone planets in the Universe than  
there are stars, which makes it much easier for the future space missions 
to  obtain images of these planets.  
"So, although only a rather simple discovery, its implications might force  
us to re-think how common habitable-zone planets are in the  Universe."



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