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(Scientists Discover a Nearly Earth-sized Planet)
Oleh: Jennifer Quinn - AP
HATFIELD, England - In the search for 
Earth-like planets, astronomers zeroed in Tuesday on two places that 
look awfully familiar to home. One is close to the right size. The other
 is in the right place. European researchers said they not only found 
the smallest exoplanet ever, called Gliese 581 e, but realized that a 
neighboring planet discovered earlier, Gliese 581 d, was in the prime 
habitable zone for potential life.
"The Holy Grail of current exoplanet 
research is the detection of a rocky, Earth-like planet in the 
'habitable zone,'" said Michel Mayor, an astrophysicist at Geneva 
University in Switzerland.
An American expert called the discovery of the tiny planet "extraordinary."
Gliese 581 e is only 1.9 times the size 
of Earth - while previous planets found outside our solar system are 
closer to the size of massive Jupiter, which NASA says could swallow 
more than 1,000 Earths.
Gliese 581 e sits close to the nearest 
star, making it too hot to support life. Still, Mayor said its discovery
 in a solar system 20 1/2 light years away from Earth is a "good example
 that we are progressing in the detection of Earth-like planets."
He spoke at a news conference Tuesday at
 the University of Hertfordshire during the European Week of Astronomy 
and Space Science.
Gliese 581 d is probably too large to be
 made only of rocky material, fellow astronomer and team member Stephane
 Udry said, adding it was possible the planet had a "large and deep" 
ocean.
"It is the first serious 'water-world' candidate," Udry said.
Mayor's main planet-hunting competitor, 
Geoff Marcy of the University of California, Berkeley, praised the find 
of Gliese 581 e as "the most exciting discovery" so far of exoplanets - 
planets outside our solar system.
"This discovery is absolutely 
extraordinary," Marcy told The Associated Press by e-mail, calling the 
discoveries a significant step in the search for Earth-like planets.
While Gliese 581 e is too hot for life 
"it shows that nature makes such small planets, probably in large 
numbers," Marcy commented. "Surely the galaxy contains tens of billions 
of planets like the small, Earth-mass one announced here."
Nearly 350 planets have been found 
outside our solar system, but so far nearly every one of them was found 
to be extremely unlikely to harbor life.
Most were too close or too far from 
their sun, making them too hot or too cold for life. Others were too big
 and likely to be uninhabitable gas giants like Jupiter. Those that are 
too small are highly difficult to detect in the first place.
Both Gliese 581 d and Gliese 581 e are located in constellation Libra and orbit around Gliese 581.
Like other planets circling that star - 
scientists have discovered four so far - Gliese 581 e was found using 
the European Southern Observatory's telescope in La Silla, Chile.
The telescope has a special instrument 
which splits light to find wobbles in different wavelengths. Those 
wobbles can reveal the existence of other worlds.
"It is great work and shows the 
potential of this detection method," said Lisa Kaltenegger, an 
astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
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