The
nearest Earth-like planet is only 16 light-years away from us. It has a
mass that is more than five times the mass of the Earth and it orbits a
red dwarf star that has half the mass and radius of our sun.
But the most important thing about the Gliese 832c, as astronomers at the University of New South Wales are calling it,
is that it receives the same average energy as the Earth does from the
sun. This makes it fall in a "habitable zone" — the just-right range of
distances that could allow liquid water to exist on a world's surface,
according to Space.com. "It's just a stone's throw from Earth in the
cosmic scheme of things," writes Space.com's Mike Wall.
This
makes the Gliese 832c one of the top three most Earth-like planets ever
discovered and the closest one to Earth of all three, says Abel Mendez
Torres on the Planetary Habitability Lab's blog. Head over to the full post for more fascinating details. [Sci-News.com via The Verge]
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With thanks to Gizmodo