Scientists discover super-Earth exoplanets are more common in the universe than we thought

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Astronomers have discovered that “super-Earth” planets may exist on wider orbits than previously thought — and this implies these rocky, or “terrestrial,” worlds are far more common than was suspected. Super-Earths, in short, are planets with masses up to 10 times that of our planet, but still less than the masses of gas giant planets.

The discovery came after a small extrasolar planet, or “exoplanet,” in a wide orbit around its star was discovered, courtesy of a gravitational “microlensing” event designated OGLE-2016-BLG-0007. This event indicated the exoplanet had a planet-to-star mass ratio that roughly doubles the Earth-sun mass ratio.



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