Mystery Signals Suggest Habitable Earth-Like World Exists 22 Light Years Away
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Subject: Mystery Signals Suggest Habitable Earth-Like World Exists 22 Light Years Away Sat Mar 07, 2015 6:34 am
Mystery Signals Suggest Habitable Earth-Like World Exists 22 Light Years Away
Published on Mar 6, 2015
http://www.undergroundworldnews.com
Astronomers believe mysterious signals - previously dismissed as stellar bursts - are coming from an Earth-like planet.
The Gliese 581d planet has conditions that could support life, and is likely to be a rocky world, twice the size of Earth.
Signals from the planet were initially discovered in 2010, but last year dismissed as noise from distant stars.
Now, a further study claims that the 2014 research was based on 'inadequate analyses of the data' and that Gliese 581d does exist.
CONTROVERSY AROUND GLIESE 581D: IS IT REALLY A PLANET?
The planet was initially discovered in 2010 and was the first Earth-like planet discovered in the 'Goldilocks'-zone around another star.
But soon after the discovery, another group of scientists said the signals were in fact simply magnetic bursts from stars.
The latest study claims that last year's research was based on 'inadequate analyses of the data'. They said the method was suitable for large planets, but the technique was unable to find small planets like GJ 581d.
Last year, Pennsylvania State University researchers said Gliese 581d - and its companion Gliese 581g - were simply a trick of the light caused by magnetic bursts from a local star 22 light-years away.
The new British research, however, argues the method uses by the Pennsylvania team was only suitable for large planets, and that it could miss small ones like GJ 581d.
The study, by Queen Mary University, London and the University of Hertfordshire, claims to use a more accurate model on the existing data.
'The existence (or not) of GJ 581d is significant because it was the first Earth-like planet discovered in the 'Goldilocks'-zone around another star and it is a benchmark case for the Doppler technique,' said lead author, Dr Guillem Anglada-Escudé.