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Known Exoplanets Orbiting Stars Near The Sun
Or Not ...
Google Plus Science Lab | May 26, 2013
May 26, 2013
In the Milky Way galaxy, it is expected that there are many billions of planets, with many more free-floating planetary-mass bodies orbiting the galaxy directly. The nearest known exoplanet is Alpha Centauri Bb.
Writing in The Astrophysical Journal last month, Artie P. Hatzes, the director of the Thuringian State Observatory in Germany, reported that he could not confirm the planet when he went looking for it in the European data ... That doesn't mean the planet does not exist, Dr. Hatzes wrote, but “in my years of experience in extracting planet signals, this simply does not ‘smell’ like a real planet.”
Dr. Hatzes’s skepticism proved catching. Suzanne Aigrain of Oxford University quoted Carl Sagan’s dictum that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, saying that Dr. Hatzes’s paper “certainly casts doubt on the original evidence.”
Read about Alpha Centauri Bb ...
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Almost all of the planets detected so far are within our home galaxy the Milky Way; however, there have been a small number of possible detections of extragalactic planets. Astronomers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics reported in January 2013, that "at least 17 billion" Earth-sized exoplanets are estimated to reside in the Milky Way galaxy.
(Google Plus Science Lab)