Astronomers Estimate 100 Billion Habitable Earth-Like Planets in the Milky Way, 50 Sextillion in the Universe
Astronomers at the
University of Auckland claim that there are actually around 100 billion
habitable, Earth-like planets in the Milky Way — significantly more than the
previous estimate of around 17 billion. There are roughly 500 billion galaxies
in the universe, meaning there is somewhere in the region of
50,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (5×1022) habitable planets.

I’ll leave you to
do the math on whether one of those 50 sextillion planets has the right
conditions for nurturing alien life or not. The previous figure of 17 billion
Earth-like planets in the Milky Way came from
the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in January, which
analyzed data from the Kepler space observatory. Kepler essentially measures
the dimming (apparent magnitude) of stars as planets transit in front of them —
the more a star dims, the larger the planet.
Through repeated
observations we can work out the planet’s orbital period, from which we can
usually derive the orbital distance and surface temperature. According to Phil
Yock from the University of Auckland, Kepler’s technique generally finds
“Earth-sized planets that are quite close to parent stars,” and are therefore
“generally hotter than Earth [and not habitable].”
The University of
Auckland’s technique, called gravitational microlensing, instead measures the
number of Earth-size planets that orbit at twice the Sun-Earth distance. This
results in a list of planets that are generally cooler than Earth — but by
interpolating between this new list, and Kepler’s list, the Kiwi astronomers
hope to generate a more accurate list of habitable, Earth-like planets. “We
anticipate a number in the order of 100 billion,” says Yock.
Gravitational
microlensing, an effect theorized by Einstein back in 1936, is exactly what it
sounds like. Essentially, light emitted by a star is bent by the gravity of
massive objects, ultimately allowing astronomers to work out just how large
those objects are.
Gravitational
microlensing has been used in recent years to detect planets the size of
Neptune or Jupiter, and now Yock his colleagues at the University of Auckland
have proposed a new method for detecting Earth-sized planets. The astronomers
hope to use this new microlensing technique with a huge suite of telescopes —
located in Chile, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Hawaii, and Texas — to
confirm their estimate of 100 billion Earth-like habitable planets.
Suffice it to say,
if the Milky Way contains 100 billion Earth-like planets, and there’s somewhere
in the region of 500 billion galaxies, then there’s an extremely high chance of
other planets harboring life. As for how we’ll get to those
planets, though — or, alternatively, how the residents of those planets will
get to us — remains a very big question.
The nearest
probably-habitable planet is Tau Ceti e, which is 11.9 light years from
Earth. The fastest spacecraft ever, Helios II, traveled at 43 miles per second
(70km/s), or 0.000234c (the speed of light). At that speed it
would take 51,000 years for a spacecraft to reach Tau Ceti e.
It gets worse:
Helios II was only travelling that fast because it was orbiting close to the
Sun; Voyager, for example, travels at just 8 miles per second (so, about
200,000 years to reach Tau Ceti e). To reach another star within a reasonable
time period (say, 50-100 years) we would need a propulsion system that’s
capable of around 0.1c (10% light speed).
There are a few
proposed methods for reaching such insane speeds (antimatter rockets, fusion
rockets), but nothing that’s being immediately (and seriously) considered for
interstellar travel. Who knows, maybe NASA’s
warp drive will pan out? If they can work out the whole annihilating-the-star-system-upon-arrival
issue, that is…
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