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Closest Sun-Like Star May Have Planets

By Carnegie Institution on Dec 19, 2012   Science/Education  

Washington, D.C.— An international team of scientists, including Carnegie's Paul Butler, has discovered that Tau Ceti, one of the closest and most Sun-like stars, may have five planets. Their work is published by Astronomy & Astrophysics and is available online.

Martian history: Finding a common denominator with Earth's

By Carnegie Institution on Nov 19, 2012   Science/Education  

Washington, DC — A team of scientists, including Carnegie's Conel Alexander and Jianhua Wang, studied the hydrogen in water from the Martian interior and found that Mars formed from similar building blocks to that of Earth, but that there were differences in the later evolution of the two planets. This implies that terrestrial planets, including […]

New Habitable Zone Super-Earth Found in Exosolar System

By Carnegie Institution on Nov 9, 2012   Science/Education  

Washington, D.C.—Astronomers have discovered a new super-Earth in the habitable zone, where liquid water and a stable atmosphere could reside, around the nearby star HD 40307. It is one of three new super-Earths found around the star that has three other low-mass planets orbiting it.

Volcanoes Deliver 2 Flavors of Water

By Carnegie Institution on Feb 27, 2012   General News  

Washington, D.C.— Seawater circulation pumps hydrogen and boron into the oceanic plates that make up the seafloor, and some of this seawater remains trapped as the plates descend into the mantle at areas called subduction zones.

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