Scientists discover 'Super-Earth' planet that 'could host alien life'
An exoplanet more than double the size of Earth could potentially be habitable, astronomers have found.
This opens the search for life up to planets significantly larger than Earth, but smaller than Neptune.
A team from the University of Cambridge used the mass, radius, and atmospheric data of the exoplanet K2-18b and determined it is possible for the planet to host liquid water at habitable conditions beneath its hydrogen-rich atmosphere.
K2-18b is 124 light-years away, 2.6 times the radius and 8.6 times the mass of Earth, and orbits its star within the habitable zone, where temperatures could allow liquid water to exist.
Last year, two different teams reported the detection of water vapour in the hydrogen-rich atmosphere of the exoplanet – a planet outside our solar system.
But the extent of the atmosphere and the conditions of the interior underneath remained unknown.
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