The habitable zone of a star is defined as the area around a star where a planet could have liquid water on its surface. Just because a planet lies in the habitable zone of a system doesn't mean it is Earth-like, however. Both Mars and Venus are within the habitable zone of our solar system, though their atmospheres don’t allow for liquid water.“We are now glimpsing for the first time the secrets of our nearest companion stars and their previously hidden reservoirs of potentially habitable planets,” said Paul Butler, an astronomer at the Carnegie Institution for Science. “This work presages the time when we will be able to directly see these planets, and search them for water, carbon dioxide, methane, and other signposts of life.” used a new technique to detect the planets, applying “intensive” modelling to data collected from over 6,000 observations of Tau Ceti. The research team was able to find signals half the size of what was previously possible, increasing the sensitivity of small planet searches and discovering Tau Ceti’s satellites.
“We pioneered new data modelling techniques by adding artificial signals to the data and testing our recovery of the signals with a variety of different approaches, said Mikko Tuomi, who led the team from the University of Hertfordshire. “This significantly improved our noise modelling techniques and increased our sensitivity to find low mass planets. ‘Tau Ceti’ was chosen, say the astronomers, because it was though Tau Ceti had no planets and would be a good benchmark for the new technique. The researchers suggest that due to Tau Ceti’s close proximity, the atmospheres of the newly discovered planets could be analyzed in the near future.
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