Discovering the planet 13,000 light-years away from Earth

Recently NASA continues to discover a smoky cloud-like planet, located 13,000 light-years from Earth. This is said to be one of the furthest planets ever seen in the universe.

NASA discovered the planet 13,000 light-years from Earth

According to the latest scientific news on the Daily Mail, NASA found a planet 13,000 light-years away from Earth, which is considered one of the most distant planetary images on Earth found before. now on.

Observed from the Spitzer space telescope and the Ogle Warsaw Telescope, in Chile, astronomers call this planet 'Ogle-2014-BLG-0124Lb '. The newly discovered planet is about half the size of Mars , this information supports scientists to further explore the law of distributing planets in the Milky Way Milky Way.

Picture 1 of Discovering the planet 13,000 light-years away from Earth
The furthest planet in the universe compared to the Earth of love at this time is 13000 light years

Most of the time, planets have found a distance closer to Earth than Ogle-2014-BLG-0124 10 from 10 to 100 times. Using micro-lens technology to observe, astronomers have discovered about 30 extraterrestrial planets to date, with the furthest planet about 25,000 light-years from Earth.

"The micro-lens experiment was originally used to study planets around the solar system, near the center of the Milky Way ," Columbus scientist Andrew Gould of Ohio State University, Columbus said .

The lens is installed in space telescopes to effectively support other planet-hunting missions, such as the Kepler telescope, which has helped scientists find more than 1,000 acts. refined around the Earth.

Picture 2 of Discovering the planet 13,000 light-years away from Earth
Expressed in the universe, the planet has a strange form of smoke spots

Of the 30 planets detected by micro-lenses, nearly half cannot determine the exact location. So far, thanks to the technical innovation of micro-lenses on Spitzer space telescopes, astronomers can look more closely at planets located about 207 million kilometers away from the Earth - farther than how light from the Sun reaches Earth.

Dr. Jennifer Yee of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center said: ' Spitzer is the world's first space telescope to capture light from exoplanets, discovering the largest' ring 'around Saturn.' Along with Spitzer, the Ogle telescope also showed the image of a smoky, smoky-looking planet, thousands of light-years away from Earth that Spiter had discovered 20 days earlier.