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Astronomers Discover Four Tiny Planets Orbiting Barnard's Star
Hawaii, USAWednesday, March 12, 2025
Astronomers use special tools to find these planets. They can’t see the planets directly, so they look for slight wobbles in the star’s light. These wobbles show that planets are pulling on the star. The tool MAROON-X, installed on the Gemini Telescope in Hawaii, helped detect three of these planets. The fourth planet was found by combining this data with earlier observations from an instrument called ESPRESSO in Chile.
The planets around Barnard’s Star are likely small and rocky. However, their orbits are too close to the star for any comfortable conditions. Still, the discovery is exciting because it gives us more information about how planets form.
These tiny planets are some of the smallest ever found with this method. Most rocky exoplanets discovered so far are larger than Earth. Scientists want to see if smaller planets have different compositions. This could give clues about how they form.
Barnard’s Star is an M dwarf, a type of star known for intense magnetic activity. This activity might affect how planets develop around these stars. Understanding these processes could help us find stars with stable surfaces, which is important for the search for life.
Future searches will focus on finding planets in more temperate zones. Each new advance in technology brings us closer to uncovering new surprises. The possibility of spotting something remarkable grows with every improved telescope.
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