NASA, using Kepler space telescope, finds smallest planet yet

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The third planet in the system, called Kepler-37d, is about twice as big as Earth and orbits in 40 days. It is likely to be a gassy, Neptune-like planet— but very hot, Barclay said.

All three bodies are closer to their host star than Mercury is to the sun, and none of them would be suitable for supporting life as we know it, Barclay said.

But their discovery is still “really good news” for the search for habitable worlds, he added, because it demonstrates that the Kepler telescope is sensitive enough to find Earth-sized planets with longer orbits “in the not-too distant future.”

Because the Kepler-37 planets are so close to their star and orbit it so quickly, scientists were able to observe dozens of light dips associated with their transits. Planets orbiting at greater distances don’t pass in front of their star as frequently, so it takes longer for researchers to accumulate sufficient data to study.

Barclay said he doesn’t expect the telescope to find many more planets as small as Kepler-37b, however. They’re just too hard to see.

“There’s a limit to how small a signal you can detect,” he said.

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