News

What can Earth-sized exoplanets teach scientists about the formation and evolution of exoplanets throughout the cosmos? This is what a recently submitted study hopes to address as an international ...
What can Earth-sized exoplanets teach scientists about the formation and evolution of exoplanets throughout the cosmos? This is what a study recently posted to the arXiv preprint server hopes to ...
News that the dwarf star TRAPPIST-1 was home to seven planets potentially in its habitable goldilocks zone was met with great fanfare when the announcement was made earlier this year.
Abundance of Earth-like Exoplanets The universe has no shortage of similarities to Earth when it comes to celestial ...
Discovered in 2017, TRAPPIST-1 is a system of seven Earth-sized planets orbiting a red dwarf star much dimmer than our sun, about 40 light years away.
The James Webb Space Telescope will look for biosignatures and more when it observers the Trappist-1 system's rocky planets. Credit: NASA Kennedy slashing 10,000 jobs in health department overhaul ...
Despite this proximity, because Trappist-1 is much smaller and cooler than the sun, its habitable zone is much closer to its surface when compared to our star's habitable zone.
Move over TRAPPIST-1 – there’s an exciting new planetary system in town. Meet Kepler-385, home to seven Super-Earths that were just discovered in existing data.
A group of scientists concludes that no signs of the atmosphere are found on this TRAPPIST-1 b. With this, the team is currently searching for answers about the contamination of starlight.
Exoplanet TRAPPIST-1 b is the closest planet to the system’s central star and is featured in the foreground with no apparent atmosphere.
Exoplanets in the habitable zone of the Trappist-1 star, some 40 light-years away from Earth, are more likely to have liquid water than researchers previously thought, according to a new study.