The NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope reveals astronomers a new alien planet possibly covered with molten lava.
EnlargeScientists have discovered what appears to be an alien planet just two-thirds the size of Earth, a heat-blasted world perhaps covered in molten lava, a new study reports.
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Astronomers discovered the newfound?alien planet, known as UCF-1.01, using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. The diminutive world is just 33 light-years away, making it a near neighbor of Earth in the cosmic scheme of things.
"We have found strong evidence for a very small, very hot and very near planet with the help of the?Spitzer Space Telescope," study lead author Kevin Stevenson, of the University of Central Florida (UCF) in Orlando, said in a statement. "Identifying nearby small planets such as UCF-1.01 may one day lead to their characterization using future instruments."
UCF-1.01 remains a planet candidate ? rather than an officially recognized planet ? because researchers have yet to measure its mass. But the discovery team thinks it's the real deal.
"Despite the lack of a confirmed mass, the team is confident future observations will verify our findings," said co-author Joseph Harrington, also of UCF. [Gallery: The Smallest Alien Planets]
Observing transits
Stevenson and his colleagues weren't looking for new planets when they found UCF-1.01. It popped up unexpectedly in Spitzer observations of the Neptune-size exoplanet GJ 436b.
The researchers noticed slight, periodic dips in the infrared light streaming from GJ 436b's red dwarf parent star, indicating some small body was blocking the star's light. Other instruments, including NASA's prolific?Kepler space telescope, commonly use this "transit method" to find new exoplanets.
By studying these brightness dips in detail, the team was able to determine several basic properties of UCF-1.01. The planet's diameter is likely about 5,200 miles (8,400 kilometers), making the world two-thirds as wide as Earth.
But UCF-1.01 is not very Earth-like. It sits just 1.7 million miles (2.7 million km) from its parent star, completing one orbit every 1.4 days. So it's likely a scorched, baking world with surface temperatures exceeding 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit (540 degrees Celsius), researchers said.
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