MarketScale
‹ Back to Industries

Sciences

LISTEN: Astronomers just spotted a new ‘Super Earth’ planet that feels a whole lot like home

Astronomers have discovered a new SUPER EARTH planet that could be the next frontier. K2-18b was originally discovered in 2015 but after further study by astronomers has been categorized as a SUPER EARTH planet. Right now, scientists have narrowed down the planets makeup to being either mostly rocky with a gaseous atmosphere like Earth OR…

By Sciences · December 14, 2017, 1:53 AM UTC
Share

Key takeaways

01

Astronomers have discovered a new SUPER EARTH planet that could be the next frontier.

02

K2-18b was originally discovered in 2015 but after further study by astronomers has been categorized as a SUPER EARTH planet.

03

Right now, scientists have narrowed down the planets makeup to being either mostly rocky with a gaseous atmosphere like Earth OR…

Astronomers have discovered a new SUPER EARTH planet that could be the next frontier. K2-18b was originally discovered in 2015 but after further study by astronomers has been categorized as a SUPER EARTH planet. Right now, scientists have narrowed down the planets makeup to being either mostly rocky with a gaseous atmosphere like Earth OR a water planet with thick layers of ice covering its surface. “With the current data, we can’t distinguish between those two possibilities,” says Ryan Cloutie, PhD student at University of Toronto Scarborough. “But with NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope we can probe the atmosphere and see whether it has an extensive atmosphere or it’s a planet covered in water.” It’s sounds like the next Earth is in a galaxy not so far away after all.

About the author

S
Sciences

Free workspace

You just read one expert. Imagine publishing yours.

This article was produced through MarketScale. Create a free workspace and turn your own team's expertise into articles, video, and social, at scale. No credit card, no demo required.

Request invite →Book a demoNPS +73 · 1,000+ creators · 38+ countries

Explore More Sciences Insights

Discover expert perspectives across the full Sciences vertical.

Browse Sciences Hub

About the Expert

S
Sciences