NEW SCIENTIST– Buried in the flood of data from the Kepler telescope
is a planetary system unlike any seen before. Two of its apparent
planets share the same orbit around their star. If the discovery is
confirmed, it would bolster a theory that Earth once shared its orbit
with a Mars-sized body that later crashed into it, resulting in the
moon’s formation.
The two planets are part of a four-planet system dubbed KOI-730. They circle their sun-like parent star every 9.8 days at exactly the same orbital distance, one permanently about 60 degrees ahead of the other. In the night sky of one planet, the other world must appear as a constant, blazing light, never fading or brightening.
Read full article about Two Planets Found Sharing One Orbit.
Photo by NASA/Ames/JPL-Caltech
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