Our Milky Way world is home to no less than 100 billion outsider planets, and perhaps some more, another examination proposes. “It’s an amazing number, looking at this logically,” lead creator Jonathan Swift, of Caltech in Pasadena, said in a proclamation. “Fundamentally there’s one of these planets for each star.”
Quick and his associates showed up at their gauge in the wake of considering a five-planet framework called Kepler-32, which lies around 915 light-years from Earth. The five universes were identified by NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope, which signals the small brilliance plunges caused when exoplanets cross their star’s face according to the instrument’s point of view.