NASA unveiled its most comprehensive findings from its Kepler space telescope mission Monday, including the discovery of 219 new exoplanets, 10 of which are similar in size to Earth and could potentially have life.
The results are part of the final catalog of data released from Kepler's first four years in space (2009-2013) and boosts the total of exoplanets in the galaxy to 4,034.
Scientists using @NASAKepler have identified 219 potential new worlds! Watch live: https://t.co/4ppqT2Hwmn Have Qs? #askKepler pic.twitter.com/YoVWPJiNwu
— NASA Exoplanets (@NASAExoplanets) June 19, 2017
The 10 rocky, Earth-size planets orbit “in their star's habitable zone,” (the so-called “Goldilocks zone”) meaning they could potentially support liquid water, Kepler scientist Mario Perez said at a news conference Monday in Silicon Valley, California.
The presence of liquid water is considered a key ingredient to the existence of life.
"Many of the new planet candidates are likely to have small rocky cores enveloped by a thick atmosphere of hydrogen and helium, and some are thought to be ocean worlds," NASA shared in its Tumblr blog.
The Kepler data set is the only set containing a catalog of these near Earth-sized planets with roughly the same orbit, according to Perez.
“Are we alone? Maybe Kepler today has told us indirectly, although we need confirmation, that we are probably not alone,” Perez said.
Only three planets in our solar system are within the habitable zone of the sun: Mars, Venus and Earth. "I would only want to live on one of those," Kepler research scientist Susan Thompson told CNN.
Kepler's latest findings only account for a tiny part of the galaxy (a patch of sky in the Cygnus constellation) and before it launched, scientists expected the frequency of Earth-like planets to be about 1 percent of the stars, Alan Boss, astronomer at the Carnegie Institution, told ABC News.
But according to Kepler scientists, the number is closer to 60 percent.
As Kepler’s first mission comes to a close in 2018, scientists are calling its finality a new beginning.
“It’s amazing the things that Kepler has found,” Thompson said in a press conference. “It has shown us these terrestrial worlds, and we still have all this work to do to really understand how common Earths are in the galaxy.”
Read NASA's full news release.
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