KOI-3158: The oldest known system of terrestrial-size planets

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Abstract

The first discoveries of exoplanets around Sun-like stars have fueled efforts to find ever smaller worlds evocative of Earth and other terrestrial planets in the Solar System. While gas-giant planets appear to form preferentially around metal-rich stars, small planets (with radii less than four Earth radii) can form under a wide range of metallicities. This implies that small, including Earth-size, planets may have readily formed at earlier epochs in the Universe's history when metals were far less abundant. We report Kepler spacecraft observations of KOI-3158, a metal-poor Sun-like star from the old population of the Galactic thick disk, which hosts five planets with sizes between Mercury and Venus. We used asteroseismology to directly measure a precise age of 11.2 ± 1.0 Gyr for the host star, indicating that KOI-3158 formed when the Universe was less than 20 % of its current age and making it the oldest known system of terrestrial-size planets. We thus show that Earth-size planets have formed throughout most of the Universe's 13.8-billion-year history, providing scope for the existence of ancient life in the Galaxy.

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APA

Campante, T. L., Barclay, T., Swift, J. J., Huber, D., Adibekyan, V. Z., Cochran, W., … White, T. R. (2015). KOI-3158: The oldest known system of terrestrial-size planets. In EPJ Web of Conferences (Vol. 101). EDP Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201510102004

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