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Published: May 31, 2008
WASHINGTON - Astronomers have discovered what may be the smallest alien planet yet - a rocky "super-Earth" only four times heavier than our home planet.
It's orbiting a small star at a distance that puts it in the so-called "habitable zone" - a region neither too hot nor too cold for liquid water and therefore suitable for possible life.
Scientists think such Earth-like planets are the best hope for detecting evidence of living organisms beyond our solar system. The tentative finding, which has yet to be confirmed, was reported during May's meeting of the International Astronomical Union in Cambridge, Mass.
The object is one of 45 potential new planets in the Milky Way galaxy recently discovered by the European Southern Observatory's 140-inch telescope perched on a mountaintop at La Silla, Chile.
Previously, astronomers have confirmed the existence of 293 so-called "exoplanets" orbiting other stars.
McClatchy-Tribune
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