The search for ‘another Earth’ has been a staple of science fiction for decades, and now a group of astronomers hope to discover one on our galactic doorstep.
Alpha Centauri is a triple star system just over four light years from the Earth, split into a pair of sun-like stars known as AB, and a red dwarf called Proxima Centauri.
So far planets have only been found orbiting Proxima Centauri, but experts from the University of Sydney and Breakthrough Initiatives believe they will find a world orbiting the larger binary pair using a new privately funded telescope.
Known as the Toliman mission, it will launch in 2023 and scan Alpha Centauri AB for worlds in the habitable zone, where liquid water can flow on the surface.
The team hope to be able to say whether there are habitable worlds orbiting either or both of the binary stars by the middle of this decade.
A simulated view of what the TOLIMAN telescope could see of the Alpha Centauri binary through its diffractive pupil lens
The closest star system to the Earth is the famous Alpha Centauri group. Located in the constellation of Centaurus (The Centaur), at a distance of 4.3 light-years, this system is made up of the binary formed by the stars Alpha Centauri A and Alpha Centauri B, plus the faint red dwarf Alpha Centauri C, also known as Proxima Centauri
While the cost hasn’t been revealed, it will in part be funded by a $788,000 (£425,000) grant from the Australian government and includes work by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Saber Astronautics in Australia.
TOLIMAN stands for Telescope for Orbit Locus Interferometric Monitoring of our Astronomical Neighbourhood, but is also the ancient Arabic name for the star.
It is a new approach to exoplanet discovery, creating a telescope to focus on the nearest star systems, looking for potentially habitable worlds, instead of just any world.
The telescope uses a diffractive pupil lense – a mirror that spreads starlight captured from nearby stars into a complex flower-like pattern.
This pattern makes it easier to detect perturbances of star movements that are the tell-tale signs of orbiting planets.
‘Our nearest stellar neighbours – the Alpha Centauri and Proxima Centauri systems – are turning out to be extraordinarily interesting,’ said Dr Pete Worden, Executive Director of the Breakthrough Initiatives, which is funding the mission.
‘The TOLIMAN mission will be a huge step towards finding out if planets capable of supporting life exist there.’
Professor Peter Tuthill, leader of the project from the University of Sydney, said this will present a new window on the universe, including our nearest neighbour.
‘Astronomers have access to amazing technologies that allow us to find thousands of planets circling stars across vast reaches of the galaxy,’ he said.
‘Yet we hardly know anything about our own celestial backyard. It is a modern problem to have; we are like net-savvy urbanites whose social media connections are global, but we don’t know anyone living on our own block.’
Having such a blind spot in our understanding of the local universe has ‘important consequences’ for astronomy, according to Prof Tuthill.
‘These next-door planets are the ones where we have the best prospects for finding and analysing atmospheres, surface chemistry and possibly even the fingerprints of a biosphere – the tentative signals of life,’ he added.
Telescope mirror engraving for TOLIMAN. Alpha Centauri is a triple star system just over four light years from the Earth, split into a pair of sun-like stars known as AB, and a red dwarf called Proxima Centauri
The team believe that either or both of the two stars in Alpha Centauri AB may host temperate planets – those with flowing water that could host life.
The third star, Proxima Centauri, is already believed to have one planet in a ‘Goldilocks orbit’, discovered in 2016.
Breakthrough Initiatives, founded by Israeli science and technology investor and philanthropist Yuri Milner, which is supporting the mission, has a number of programs engaged in the hunt for alien life throughout the universe.
Its Starshot mission hopes to one day send a fleet of tiny probes to Alpha Centauri, flying using lightsails – a mission that will take 20 years from launch, and four years to send any information back to the Earth.
Proposed TOLIMAN mission telescope design. The team believe that either or both of the two stars in Alpha Centauri AB may host temperate planets – those with flowing water that could host life
Our closest neighbours: Alpha and Proxima Centauri are just four light years away, here photographed in visible and x-ray spectra
Other projects, including TOLIMAN, have been designed to find planets and search for life in our stellar neighbourhood.
Pete Klupar, Chief Engineer of Breakthrough Watch, said: ‘These nearby planets are where humanity will take our first steps into interstellar space using high-speed, futuristic, robotic probes.
‘If we consider the nearest few dozen stars, we expect a handful of rocky planets like Earth orbiting at the right distance for liquid surface water to be possible.’
Saber Astronautics will provide spaceflight mission operations support, including satellite communications and command, space traffic management and a range of other flight services to download data from the satellite.
Dr Jason Held, CEO of Saber Astronautics, said: ‘TOLIMAN is a mission that Australia should be very proud of – it is an exciting, bleeding-edge space telescope supplied by an exceptional international collaboration. It will be a joy to fly this bird.’
Dr Eduardo Bendek, a member of the team from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said it is a huge technological challenge finding planets orbiting even the nearest and brightest stars in our galactic neighbourhood.
‘Our TOLIMAN mission will launch a custom-designed space telescope that makes extremely fine measurements of the position of the star in the sky. If there is a planet orbiting the star, it will tug on the star betraying a tiny, but measurable, wobble.’
Most of the thousands of known planets outside the solar system have been discovered using space telescopes such as NASA’s Kepler and TESS missions.
Finding exoplanets close to home will take more finely tuned instruments, which is where the TOLIMAN mission comes in.
Mr Klupar said: ‘The signal we are looking for requires a real leap in precision measurement.’
Professor Tuthill added: ‘Nobody is underestimating the challenge, but our innovative design incorporates new tricks. Our plan is for an agile, low-cost mission that delivers results by about the middle of the decade.’
Pictured, a not-to-scale representation of how far away Proxima B is from Earth compared to Voyager 1, the farthest man-made object which was launched in 1977
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