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PICS: NASA's newly discovered planet is tiniest to date

Last updated on: February 25, 2013 08:09 IST

Image: The line up compares artist's concepts of the planets in the Kepler-37 system to the moon and planets in the solar system
Photographs: NASA/Ames/JPL-Caltech

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has discovered the smallest known planet outside our solar system which is slightly larger than the moon and orbits its sun like host star every 13 days.

NASA's Kepler space telescope detected the smallest planet yet found around a star similar to the Sun in a new planetary system.

The planets are located in a system called Kepler-37, about 210 light-years from earth in the constellation Lyra. The smallest planet, Kepler-37b, is slightly larger than our moon, measuring about one-third the size of earth.

It is smaller than Mercury, which made its detection a challenge.

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PICS: NASA's newly discovered planet is tiniest to date

Image: The artist's concept depicts the new planet dubbed Kepler-37b. The planet is slightly larger than our moon, measuring about one-third the size of earth
Photographs: NASA/Ames/JPL-Caltech

The moon-size planet and its two companion planets were found by scientists with NASA's Kepler mission to find Earth-sized planets in or near the 'habitable zone', the region in a planetary system where liquid water might exist on the surface of an orbiting planet.

However, while the star in Kepler-37 may be similar to our sun, the system appears quite unlike the solar system in which we live.

Astronomers think Kepler-37b does not have an atmosphere and cannot support life as we know it. The tiny planet almost certainly is rocky in composition.

The Kepler-37c, the closer neighbouring planet, is slightly smaller than Venus, measuring almost three-quarters the size of earth. Kepler-37d, the farther planet, is twice the size of the earth.

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PICS: NASA's newly discovered planet is tiniest to date

Image: An artists rendering of what our galaxy might look as viewed from outside our Galaxy. Our sun is about 25,000 light years from the center of our galaxy. The cone illustrates the neighborhood of our galaxy that the Kepler Mission will search to find habitable planets
Photographs: Jon Lomberg/NASA

"Even Kepler can only detect such a tiny world around the brightest stars it observes," said Jack Lissauer, a planetary scientist at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett  Field, California.

"The fact we've discovered tiny Kepler-37b suggests such little planets are common, and more planetary wonders await as we continue to gather and analyse additional data," said
Lissauer in a NASA statement.

Kepler-37's host star belongs to the same class as our sun, although it is slightly cooler and smaller. All three planets orbit the star at less than the distance Mercury is to the sun, suggesting they are very hot, inhospitable worlds.

The estimated surface temperature of this smoldering  planet, at more than 426.667° C, would be hot enough to melt the zinc in a penny.

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PICS: NASA's newly discovered planet is tiniest to date

Image: This artist's concept shows the Kepler spacecraft
Photographs: NASA/Ames/JPL-Caltech

Kepler-37c and Kepler-37d, orbit every 21 days and 40 days, respectively.

"We uncovered a planet smaller than any in our solar system orbiting one of the few stars that is both bright and quiet, where signal detection was possible," said Thomas Barclay, Kepler scientist at the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute in Sonoma, California, and lead author of the new study published in the journal Nature.

"This discovery shows close-in planets can be smaller, as well as much larger, than planets orbiting our sun," he said.

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