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    160 Billion Alien Planets May Exist in Our Milky Way Galaxy

    Alien planets are incredibly common in our Milky Way galaxy, outnumbering stars by a large margin, a new study suggests.

    On average, each of the 100 billion or so stars in our galaxy hosts at least 1.6 planets, according to the study, bringing the number of likely alien worlds to more than 160 billion. And large numbers of these exoplanets are likely to be small and rocky — roughly Earth-like — since low-mass planets appear to be much more abundant than large ones.

    "This statistical study tells us that planets around stars are the rule, rather than the exception," said study lead author Arnaud Cassan of the Paris Institute of Astrophysics. "From now on, we should see our galaxy populated not only with billions of bright stars, but imagine them surrounded by as many hidden extrasolar worlds."

    Using a cosmic gravity lens

    To date, astronomers have discovered more than 700 planets beyond our own solar system, with 2,300 additional "candidates" found by NASA's Kepler space telescope awaiting confirmation.

    The vast majority of these exoplanet detections have been made using two different techniques: transit photometry and radial velocity. [Gallery: The Strangest Alien Planets]

    Kepler employs the transit method, which watches for the tiny, telltale dips in a star's brightness caused when a planet crosses the star's face, blocking some of its light. Radial velocity looks for minuscule wobbles in a star's movement caused by the gravitational tugs of orbiting planets.

    While these two methods have been highly productive, they're biased toward finding planets that orbit relatively close to their parent stars. In the new study, Cassan and his colleagues employed a different technique, known as gravitational microlensing, that feels this bias less strongly.

    In gravitational microlensing, scientists watch what happens when a massive object passes in front of a star from our perspective on Earth. The nearby object's gravitational field bends and magnifies the light from the distant star, acting like a lens.

    This produces a light curve — a brightening and fading of the faraway star's light over time — whose characteristics tell astronomers a lot about the foreground object.

    In many cases, this nearby body is a star. If it has any planets, even ones in relatively far-flung orbits, these can generate secondary light curves, alerting researchers to their presence.

    Studying millions of stars

    In the new study, the researchers looked at data gathered by a variety of Earth-based telescopes, which scanned millions of stars from 2002 to 2007 for microlensing events.

    The team closely analyzed about 40 of these events and discovered that three betrayed the presence of an alien planet around a star. One of these planets is a bit more massive than Jupiter, one is comparable to Neptune and the third is a so-called "super-Earth" with a mass about five times that of our home planet. [Gallery: Smallest Alien Planets Ever Seen]

    Considering how perfectly aligned multiple bodies must be to yield an explanet detection via microlensing, that's a pretty impressive haul, researchers said.

    The astronomers used all of this data, as well as information about seven additional planets detected by other microlensing efforts, to put a number on their planet-detection efficiency — and, by extension, the number of alien worlds that may populate the Milky Way.

    The team determined that about one-sixth of our galaxy's stars harbor Jupiter-mass planets, half have Neptune-like worlds, and nearly two-thirds host super-Earths. And that's just in the stretch of orbital space from 0.5 to 10 astronomical units from each star, the limit of the study's sensitivity. (One astronomical unit, or AU, is the distance from Earth to the sun, about 93 million miles.)

    "Moreover, we confirm that low-mass planets, such as super-Earths (up to 10 Earths) and Neptune-like planets are much more abundant than giant planets such as Saturn and Jupiter (with estimates that there are 6 to 7 times more low-mass than giant planets)," Cassan told SPACE.com in an email.

    Further, according to the researchers' calculations, every planet in the Milky Way harbors an average of 1.6 planets in the 0.5-10 AU range, which in our solar system corresponds roughly to the swath of space between Venus and Saturn.

    Since astronomers estimate that our galaxy contains about 100 billion stars, that works out to at least 160 billion alien planets. A fair number of these alien worlds are likely to have two sunsets like the planet Tatooine in the "Star Wars" films; a separate study, also announced today, related the discovery of two exoplanets that orbit a pair of suns.

    Cassan and his team report their results in the Jan. 12 issue of the journal Nature.

    Planets bound and unbound

    The true number of alien worlds may be quite a bit larger than 160 billion. Some planets hug their host stars more closely than 0.5 AU, after all, and others are more far-flung than 10 AU. And a great many likely have no host star at all.

    Last year, a different team used microlensing observations to discover a huge population of Jupiter-like planets that zoom through space unbound to a parent star. These free-flying "rogues" likely outnumber "normal" alien worlds with obvious parent stars by at least 50 percent, according to the 2011 study.

    "The two results obtained by microlensing show that planets are everywhere, and not only around stars," Cassan said.

    For those of us clinging to the notion that Earth is special, these and a raft of other recent exoplanet discoveries may be tough to stomach.

    "We used to think that the Earth might be unique in our galaxy," study co-author Daniel Kubas, also of the Paris Institute of Astrophysics, said in a statement. "But now it seems that there are literally billions of planets with masses similar to Earth orbiting stars in the Milky Way."

    You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter: @michaeldwall. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

     

    78 comments

    • Hesperos  •  4 mths ago
      160,000,000,000 planets, and if 1 in a million has intelligent life that's still 160,000 alien worlds.
      • Bad Habit 4 mths ago
        And that's just in our galaxy. There are hundreds of billions of galaxies as well.
      • YIKES! 4 mths ago
        and if one in a billion has life, thats 160

        and based on what we know about evolution, we might be the ONLY one with higher life forms.

        Other galxies are too far away to ever contact anything living there, much less to go there.
      • Triangle 4 mths ago
        Ken , we can also be on the lower scale as far as evolution is concerned. If dinosaurs
        were not killed off , whose to say they wouldn't have evolved into the dominant species. Given the fact they would of had an extra 40 to 50 million years to evolve.
    • Bill  •  4 mths ago
      Only 51 years left until the Vulcans land here on First Contact Day (April 5, 2063).
      • William 4 mths ago
        too much startrek there bud
        lay off the show
      • Bill 4 mths ago
        @William - Why should I "lay off" something which has spurred the invention of important technologies like cell phones and handheld computer tablets? Why should I "lay off" a hopeful, optimistic vision of the future where hunger, greed and poverty have been eliminated and each person's main remaining goal is simply to improve themselves? If you ask me, the world needs a lot more visionaries like Gene Roddenberry.
      • Shadow wolf 4 mths ago
        go back to the enterprise
    • Murf  •  Lehighton, Pennsylvania  •  4 mths ago
      If that's true then that's truly astonishing. And that's only one galaxy. There could be 160 billion galaxies in the universe. That's a possible 256,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 or 256 sixtillion planets. The combined amount of pictures that we've received from all of our telescopes is comparable to filling a glass of water from the ocean and basing all of our observations on that.

      I doubt Earth is the *ONLY* one with life on it.
    • Uncle Sammy  •  4 mths ago
      Such recent speculative calculations seem to indicate an Infinite and Eternal Universe of endless possibilities, if I can use such unscientific words.
    • mad dog  •  4 mths ago
      Every month or so that number doubles........we are just beginning to see......we are not alone and never have been........
      • jer 4 mths ago
        you're jumping to an unfounded conclusion, huge numbers of planets does not necessarily mean lots of life out there, we just don't know yet...
      • MattP 4 mths ago
        True Jer, that we technically don't know. I would say, though, that it is not unreasonable to think that there is. It's the difference between thinking that life's origin is a magical improbability or a chemical inevitability.
      • Joshua 4 mths ago
        Matt, I agree that it's not unreasonable to think that there's abundant life in the universe. I personally believe that it would be much more irrational to think we are the only ones out there. Now, perhaps you can enlighten us as to why the existence or non-existence of a higher intelligence, or god, would make any difference as to the amount of life in the universe?

        I fully accept evolution as there is plenty of evidence to support it. However, I have never seen any evidence to suggest that abiogenesis (your "chemical inevitability") is even possible... On the other hand, how much evidence do we have that intelligent beings can willfully control and manipulate dna to create new forms of life? Just in the last 2 years, scientists have created the first living cell whose "parent" was a computer...

        There may not be a God... but we seem to be becoming more and more like him/her every day... What will humans be able to do 1 thousand years from now? Will we be terraforming planets and starting new civilizations? Perhaps not in a thousand... but how about a million years?

        In my opinion, to discredit the existence of a "higher-intelligence" is to prematurely place limits on our own ability to ultimately become that "higher-intelligence"...
    • Ron B  •  Houston, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      just send me to the one with hot naked chicks
      • Think twice 4 mths ago
        They will run you down very quickly, Zorro
      • Bill 4 mths ago
        Okay, Ron, but it's so hot there that the flesh will literally boil right off your bones. Oh well, at least then the naked chicks there will have something to eat. Let's strap him to a rocket, pronto.
    • Mike  •  Austin, Texas  •  4 mths ago
      This study conflicts with the results of the Kepler mission and of radial velocity measurements.
    • Independent Mindset  •  Tampa, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      A couple of hours ago, a young fellow said that modern science was only guess work. In other words, he things that it is foolish stuff. Here is how I answered him:
      For some it is comforting to believe it is guesswork. However, the fact is that among those who have had some schooling and who have learned to use their noodle for things other than comic books, video games and ogling the girl next door, science and math are very tangible and real. Yes, there is some guesswork involved in some science but only as a path to seek solutions through observation, mathematics, experimentation and modeling. Let me give you bit of a break though. You are probably young and don't attend a good school and may have dumbbells as parents. However, if you read, investigate and spend some time talking to your teachers and others with some accomplishment, you might just find a world of possibilities opening up for you. Possibilities that will lead to a bright future and not one that ends up with you hanging around on street corners when you are older. Good luck and I wish you well.
    • thomasf  •  Cleveland, Ohio  •  4 mths ago
      Ah, concrete evidence! It brings you so much more than faith.
    • nuhuh  •  4 mths ago
      Well well well. Seems like all those people who refuse to believe that we are just one of many are now being kicked in their teeth. People still tell me I'm crazy for believing in alien life; yet they insist in being christians. If they can believe in a god, why shouldn't I be able to say that we aren't alone. Most people don't leave much room for argument about wether their god is real, but laugh at the thought of E.T. I can't wait for scientists to discover definitive proof that there is life among these other planets. Unfortunately we don't have the technology to do much better than spotting these relatively close planets and then viewing their behavior. One day we will be able to peer into these planets from afar and survey them for possible signs of life. The day that happens, it will only be a matter of time before we all become fully aware of how many 'others' are out there staring back at us. :)
    • tecton47  •  4 mths ago
      One interesting thing that comes to mind is how many planets are undetectable from Earth simply because that system's plane of the ecliptic is perpendicular or oblique to our point of view? Then there would be no transit in front of the host star for us to see.
    • stacker  •  4 mths ago
      Creationists still insist that we are the only intelligent life in the universe and that all was created some 6 thousand years ago. If only one planet in ten thousand had some sort of life on it and if only one of those thousands of planets had intelligent life on it there would be thousands of planets with intelligent life.Meanwhile these fools will post all kinds of drivel to bolster a argument that goes against all logic and the rule of large numbers. Scared and confused people will always deny deny deny.
    • Kimpek  •  Santa Rosa, California  •  4 mths ago
      cool.. but so far away as to be a curosity.. that pesky speed-of-light thing.. we are "stuck" right here.. new orbiters around the moon may find ice at the poles.. water!! O2 for all good people, H for rocket fuel.. a tower built at the pole, in sunlight all the time for electricity, split water for above. Underground for protection, close enough for a assistance if needed.. Should have been ther twenty years ago!! and I would weight 45 pounds!!
      PLD
      Kimpek
    • John Erickson  •  Manila, Philippines  •  4 mths ago
      160 billion is only the estimate for Milky Way and there are billions of galaxy out there and this worlds exist billions ahead of us. And life will always find to exist like the extremophiles. There are very big possibility that there are advance lifeforms out there more intelligent than us.
    • jer  •  4 mths ago
      Many worlds or rare Earths? As huge as those numbers are (many worlds) the conditions that were present here in our Solar System might end up being an incredible coincidence (rare Earths.) Lets say there are 160 billion planets in our galaxy (many worlds.) What if it ends up that the probability of a planet that meets the long list of conditions for life to develop (rare Earths) is one in a trillion? This debate will go on for a long time, hopefully someday we will gather enough data for an answer!
    • Slick  •  4 mths ago
      Alright! New life!
      Let's Stargate this shizzle!
    • Sweet  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  4 mths ago
      I'm sure the pseudoscientist creationist cult will be working overtime to twist this so it comports with their mythical history. Pity the kids who may be indoctrinated to nitpick scientific discoveries while embracing ancient scribblings as "truth."
    • Xenobia Zentron  •  Orlando, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      To boldly go where no man has gone before!
    • john smith  •  4 mths ago
      "We used to think that the Earth might be unique in our galaxy,"
      It was also believed the world was flat, and you could sail right off the edge, and that the Earth was the center of the known universe, and that the sun and other planets revolved around it.
      It was just a matter of time before more planets were discovered, and then what we know about them will be proven wrong.
    • Steven  •  4 mths ago
      Also discovered today: Fire, still hot.
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