[size=1.4em]This is an orbital distance from the star where temperature is neither too hot nor too cold, but just right to sustain liquid water, which is essential for life as we know it.
[size=1.4em]The Tau Ceti finding was made by astronomers from Australia, Britain, Chile and the United States, who applied a new technique to filter data from more than 6,000 observations.
[size=1.4em]By doing so, they believe they rooted out distorting signals, called "noise", that masked the existence of low-mass planets.
[size=1.4em]They applied the technique to light from Tau Ceti, where they determine it is not a lone star but in fact one with a planetary system, they said.
[size=1.4em]"This discovery is in keeping with our emerging view that virtually every star has planets, and that the galaxy must have many such potentially habitable Earth-sized planets," said Steve Vogt, a veteran exoplanet-hunter.
[size=1.4em]"We are now beginning to understand that Nature seems to overwhelmingly prefer systems that have multiple planets with orbits of less than one hundred days," he said in a press release published by Britain's University of Hertfordshire.
[size=1.4em]"This is quite unlike our own solar system where there is nothing with an orbit inside that of Mercury. So our solar system is, in some sense, a bit of a freak and not the most typical kind of system that Nature cooks up."
[size=1.4em]On October 17, European astronomers reported they had detected a planet with about the mass of Earth orbiting Alpha Centauri B, which is only 4.3 light years away.
[size=1.4em]However, the planet itself is not "another Earth" as it is not in the Goldilocks zone. It zips around the star at a scorchingly close distance, and liquid water could not exist there.
[size=1.4em]Source: AFP
sumber asal : http://www.telegraph.co.uk/scien ... to-nearby-star.html