homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Exoplanet count eclipses 5,000th discovery

The 5,000th exoplanet could just be the beginning.

Jordan Strickler
March 23, 2022 @ 7:35 pm

share Share

An artist’s concept of a Jupiter-mass planet orbiting the nearby star Epsilon Eridani. (Credit: NASA, ESA, and G. Bacon (STScI))

In January 1992, Aleksander Wolszczan and Dale Frail announced the finding of two rocky planets orbiting PSR B1 257+12, a pulsar in the constellation Virgo. The astronomers had just discovered the first planets outside our own solar system. Fast forward 30 years later to a batch of 65 new entries added to the Exoplanet Archive on March 21, and that odometer passes the 5,000-planet mark.

“It’s not just a number,” said Jessie Christiansen, science lead for the archive and a research scientist with the NASA Exoplanet Science Institute at Caltech in Pasadena. “Each one of them is a new world, a brand-new planet. I get excited about every one because we don’t know anything about them.”

Planets we have discovered so far have come in all shapes and sizes. These include small, rocky worlds like Earth, gas giants many times over the size of Jupiter, “hot Jupiters” (gas giants that are in scorchingly-close orbits around their stars), super-Earths, and mini-Neptunes. Add to the mix circumbinary planets (those orbiting two stars at once) and planets stubbornly orbiting the collapsed remnants of dead stars, and there have been a plethora of heavenly bodies discovered outside our solar system.

Thanks to telescopes like NASA’s TESS space telescope (the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite), within a decade the count could eclipse tens of thousands. The fact that more and more telescopes are being lofted into space, such as the James Webb Space Telescope and upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope (2027), makes this more of a probable goal.

Finding those first two planets around their spinning star essentially opened the floodgates, said Alexander Wolszczan, the lead author on the paper that unveiled the first planets.

“If you can find planets around a neutron star, planets have to be basically everywhere,” Wolszczan said. “The planet production process has to be very robust.”

Most of the confirmed exoplanets hang out within 3,000 light-years from Earth, but just last year, astronomers might have caught a glimpse of the first one outside of the Milky Way.

The possible exoplanet is some 28 million light-years away from our Blue Dot in the spiral galaxy Messier 51 (M51) — also called the Whirlpool Galaxy because of its distinctive profile. Using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory‘s X-ray data rather than more standard visual observations, this mode of discovery might end up being the new norm for those distant planets.

“We are trying to open up a whole new arena for finding other worlds by searching for planet candidates at X-ray wavelengths, a strategy that makes it possible to discover them in other galaxies,” said Rosanne Di Stefano of the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who led the study, which was published in Nature Astronomy.

And with more and more planet discoveries on the horizon, Wolszczan said it also means more probability of life elsewhere in the universe.

“To my thinking, it is inevitable that we’ll find some kind of life somewhere.”

share Share

The Universe’s First “Little Red Dots” May Be a New Kind of Star With a Black Hole Inside

Mysterious red dots may be a peculiar cosmic hybrid between a star and a black hole.

Peacock Feathers Can Turn Into Biological Lasers and Scientists Are Amazed

Peacock tail feathers infused with dye emit laser light under pulsed illumination.

Helsinki went a full year without a traffic death. How did they do it?

Nordic capitals keep showing how we can eliminate traffic fatalities.

Scientists Find Hidden Clues in The Alexander Mosaic. Its 2 Million Tiny Stones Came From All Over the Ancient World

One of the most famous artworks of the ancient world reads almost like a map of the Roman Empire's power.

Ancient bling: Romans May Have Worn a 450-Million-Year-Old Sea Fossil as a Pendant

Before fossils were science, they were symbols of magic, mystery, and power.

This AI Therapy App Told a Suicidal User How to Die While Trying to Mimic Empathy

You really shouldn't use a chatbot for therapy.

This New Coating Repels Oil Like Teflon Without the Nasty PFAs

An ultra-thin coating mimics Teflon’s performance—minus most of its toxicity.

Why You Should Stop Using Scented Candles—For Good

They're seriously not good for you.

People in Thailand were chewing psychoactive nuts 4,000 years ago. It's in their teeth

The teeth Chico, they never lie.

To Fight Invasive Pythons in the Everglades Scientists Turned to Robot Rabbits

Scientists are unleashing robo-rabbits to trick and trap giant invasive snakes