The European Southern Observatory (ESO) has announced its  exoplanet-hunting HARPS (High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher)  has discovered 50 new exoplanets, making it the largest amount of  exoplanets that has been announced at the one time. Bringing the number  of planets discovered outside our solar system to 645, the 50-planet  haul includes 16 super-Earths (planets with a mass between one and ten  times that of Earth), including one that orbits at the edge of the  habitable zone of its star.
 Wide-field view of the sky around the star HD 85512 (Image: ESO and Digitized Sky Survey 2 / Davide De Martin)
Whereas NASA's Kepler spacecraft  looks for fluctuations in the brightness of stars to detect planets  passing in front of it, HARPS is a high precision echelle spectrograph  that observes Doppler shifts in the spectrum of the star around which a  planet orbits. In contrast to the majority of planets discovered by the  transit method employed by Kepler, which are very distant from us, the  planets found by HARPS are around stars that are much closer, making  them better targets for many kinds of additional follow-up observations.
HARPS discovered its first super-Earth in the habitable zone, (Gliese 581 d),  in 2007. More recently, it was also used to demonstrate that the other  candidate super-Earth in the habitable zone around star Gliese 581 (Gliese 581 g) doesn't exist.
In the eight years since HARPS achieved first light, its observations  have allowed astronomers to improve the estimate of how likely it is  that a star like the Sun is host to low-mass planets as opposed to  gaseous giants. By studying the properties of all the HARPS planets  discovered so far, the team has found that about 40 percent of stars  similar to the Sun have at least one planet lighter than Saturn.  Additionally, the majority of exoplanets of Neptune mass or less appear  to be in systems with multiple planets.
With upgrades to both hardware and software, the team is increasing  the sensitivity of HARPS, to search for rocky planets that could support  life. One potential candidate is the newly discovered HD 85512 b, which  is estimated to be just 3.6 times the mass of the Earth and is located  at the edge of the habitable zone where water may be present in liquid  form if conditions are right.
"This is the lowest-mass confirmed planet discovered by the radial  velocity method that potentially lies in the habitable zone of its star,  and the second low-mass planet discovered by HARPS inside the habitable  zone," says Lisa Kaltenegger of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy  and Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
The team says that HARPS is now so sensitive that it can detect  radial velocity amplitudes of significantly less than 4 km/h (2.5 mph),  allowing it to detect planets under two Earth masses. Earth induces a  0.32 km/h (0.2 mph) radial velocity on the Sun.
HARPS is currently installed on ESO's 3.6 m Telescope at La Silla  Observatory in Chile but a copy of HARPS is to be installed on the  Telescopio Nazionale Galileo in the Canary Islands, to survey stars in  the northern sky. 
Additionally, a new and more powerful planet-finder,  called ESPRESSO, (Echelle SPectrograph for Rocky Exoplanet and Stable  Spectroscopic Observations), will be installed on ESO's Very Large  Telescope in Chile in 2016. It will boast radial velocity precision of  0.35 km/h (0.22 mph) or less, giving it the ability to discover  Earth-mass planets in the habitable zone of low-mass stars.
"In the coming ten to twenty years we should have the first list of  potentially habitable planets in the Sun's neighborhood. Making such a  list is essential before future experiments can search for possible  spectroscopic signatures of life in the exoplanet atmospheres,"  concludes Michel Mayor, who leads the ESO's HARPS team. 
     The habitable zone around some stars with planets (Image: ESO)
 Artist's impression of the rocky super-Earth HD 85512 b  - one of more than 50 new exoplanets found by HARPS (Image: ESO/M.  Kornmesser)
 by "environment clean generations"




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