Potential ‘Earth twins’ found
Other planet candidates identified by the American space agency Nasa’s new Kepler space telescope could have life-bearing moons.
Astronomers also confirmed the existence of a six-planet solar system centred on a Sun-like star named Kepler-11.
The wealth of observation data has amazed scientists and greatly boosted the chances of life evolving beyond the Earth.
Nasa administrator and former astronaut Charles Boden said: “In one generation we have gone from extraterrestrial planets being a mainstay of science fiction to the present, where Kepler has helped turn science fiction into today’s reality.”
The latest batch of Kepler data identified what are believed to be several hundred new planets orbiting distant stars.
Of these, 54 sit within the habitable or “Goldilocks zone” — the region just the right distance from the parent star to allow conditions that are not too hot and not too cold for liquid surface water and life to exist. Five of the candidate planets, yet to be verified by follow-up observations, are near-Earth sized.




