First 'exomoon' may have just been spotted by the Kepler Space Telescope
stronomers around the world continue to spot new planets
outside of our Solar System on a regular basis, and some of those worlds look
like they justmight be good candidates for life, but spotting moons that aren’t in our
immediate neighborhood is a far more difficult challenge. Now, researchers led
by David Kipping of Columbia University think they might be the first to actually confirm the presence of
a moon in a distant planetary system — an “exomoon” — and it’s an extremely
exciting discovery.
The team made its find using data from the Kepler Space
Telescope, and used a familiar technique to spot the mythical moon. Observing
the star called Kepler-1625, researchers have spotted regular dips in the
brightness of the light it emits, proving the presence of a planet, and a
similar strategy was used to detect the faint hint of a moon. As the planet
passed in front of the star, the brightness of the light from behind it
repeatedly dipped even further, suggesting a moon orbiting the planet was
blocking out additional light at regular intervals.
The data suggests that if the moon does exist — and the
chances of the readings being erroneous are somewhere in the neighborhood of 1
in 16,000, so it seems incredibly likely — it’s actually quite large. The
planet it orbits is thought to be roughly the size of Jupiter, and the moon
itself is as large as Neptune, making it nearly four times larger than Earth.
Despite the difficulty of detecting moons in far-off planetary
systems, finding them is still a high priority for astronomers. Moons are just
as likely — and in some cases, more likely — than their host planets to support
extraterrestrial life, and if we do manage to discover living organisms outside
of Earth, it could very well be found on a moon rather than a planet.
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