First ‘Earth Without A Sun’ Discovered: Thousands More To Be Revealed Soon
“Today, more than 4,000 exoplanets are known, revealed from their effects on the stars they orbit. But plenty of planets should have no parent stars at all. Perhaps surprisingly, these rogue planets should be extraordinarily common. Many young planets get ejected as solar systems form, creating “orphaned” planets. Others formed as members of insufficiently massive, failed solar systems. Altogether, rogue planets should outnumber the stars in our Milky Way.”
According to our best theories of how stars and planetary systems form, there should be an enormous number of planets without stars wandering through the galaxy, far outnumbering the stars themselves. But because they don’t emit their own light, these “rogue planets” should be completely invisible. Invisible doesn’t mean undetectable, however, as there is no hiding from gravity.
Here’s how we found the first Earth-sized rogue planet, with thousands more to come in the near future! (Massive shout-out to NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Telescope.)
















