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Chinese, German scientists discover super-Earth

China Daily | Updated: 2025-06-05 00:00
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KUNMING — For centuries, the question of whether life exists beyond Earth has intrigued humanity, and now a joint discovery by Chinese and German scientists may offer a significant clue.

Using the Transit Timing Variation technique for the first time, the scientists found a super-Earth — Kepler-725c, with 10 times the mass of the Earth — within the habitable zone of the Sun-like star Kepler-725, which is a promising candidate for potential habitability.

"This newly discovered nontransiting planet and its host star are located at a place about 2,472 light-years from the solar system," said Gu Shenghong, team leader from the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Yunnan Observatories.

"More crucially, this planet resides within the habitable zone of its host star, the region around a star where the temperature is suitable for liquid water to exist. It orbits around its host star with a period of 207.5 days, comparable to Earth's one-year period," Gu added.

"By analyzing the TTV signals of Kepler-725b, a gas giant planet with a 39.64-day period in the same system, the team has successfully inferred the mass and orbital parameters of the hidden planet Kepler-725c," said Sun Leilei, the first and co-corresponding author of the study, who also works with the Yunnan Observatories.

Unlike the transit method and radial velocity method, the TTV technique is not subject to specific observational challenges. Instead, it can indirectly detect the presence of a planet by simply measuring the TTVs of another known planet in orbital resonance with it, Sun said.

"It demonstrates the potential of the TTV technique to detect low-mass planets in habitable zones of Sun-like stars," Sun added.

Gu also noted that further investigation is needed to assess whether the discovered habitable planet truly possesses conditions suitable for Earth-like life.

The research is jointly conducted by the Yunnan Observatories, the Hamburg Observatory, Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, and the Nanjing Institute of Astronomical Optics and Technology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

The research was published in the journal Nature Astronomy on Tuesday.

Xinhua

 

 

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