A New Earth… Maybe?

NASA has discovered TOI 700 e, an Earth-sized planet orbiting in the habitable zone of a distant red dwarf star just 100 light-years away in the constellation Dorado. It’s about 95% the size of Earth and gets just the right amount of light and warmth for liquid water to potentially exist.

Image: theplanets.org

How It Was Found

The planet was spotted by NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), a space telescope designed to detect tiny dips in light as planets pass in front of stars. TOI 700 e isn’t alone, either. It joins its planetary sibling, TOI 700 d, another Earth-sized world in the same star system’s habitable zone.

That’s two potentially life-friendly planets in one place. Not bad, universe.

The Bigger Picture

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NASA’s powerful James Webb Space Telescope recently took a direct image of a giant exoplanet orbiting a different red dwarf. Though not habitable, the feat shows how far our space surveillance game has come and how many more planets might be hiding out there.

GREENBELT, MD – NOVEMBER 02: (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Red dwarfs, the most common stars in our galaxy, seem to be prime real estate for rocky, Earth-like worlds.

So… Are We Alone?

Not yet rolling out the welcome mat for aliens, but discoveries like this seriously shift the odds. With more planets like TOI 700 e showing up, it’s becoming harder to believe Earth is the only game in town.

And honestly? A planet with no rent, no traffic, and none of my exes? Yes, please.

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