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  • Have you ever wondered about life in the Universe? Inhabited planets orbiting distant stars?

  • Astronomers have - for centuries. After all, with so many galaxies, and each with so many

  • stars, how could the Earth be unique?

  • In 1995, Swiss astronomers Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz were the first to discover an

  • exoplanet orbiting a normal star. Since then, planet hunters have found many hundreds of

  • alien worlds. Large and small, hot and cold, and in a wide variety of orbits. Now, were

  • on the brink of discovering Earth’s twin sisters. And in the future: a planet with

  • lifethe Holy Grail of astrobiologists.

  • Michel Mayor’s team found hundreds of them from Cerro La Silla, ESO’s first Chilean

  • foothold. Here’s the CORALIE spectrograph, mounted on the Swiss Leonhard Euler Telescope.

  • It measures the tiny wobbles of stars, caused by the gravity of orbiting planets.

  • ESO’s venerable 3.6-metre telescope is also hunting for exoplanets. The HARPS spectrograph

  • is the most accurate in the world. So far, it has discovered more than 150 planets. Its

  • biggest trophy: a rich system containing at least five and maybe as many as seven alien

  • worlds. But there are other ways to find exoplanets. In 2006, the 1.5-metre Danish telescope helped

  • to discover a distant planet that is just five times more massive than the Earth.

  • The trick? Gravitational microlensing.?The planet and its parent star passed in front

  • of a brighter star in the background, magnifying its image. And in some cases, you can even

  • capture exoplanets on camera.

  • In 2004 NACO, the adaptive optics camera on the Very Large Telescope took the first image

  • ever of an exoplanet. The red dot in this image is a giant planet orbiting a brown dwarf

  • star. In 2010, NACO went one step further. This star is 130 light-years away from Earth.?

  • It is younger and brighter than the Sun, and four planets circle around it in wide orbits.

  • NACO’s eagle-eyed vision made it possible to measure the light of planet c — a gas

  • giant ten times more massive than Jupiter. Despite the glare of the parent star, the

  • feeble light of the planet could be stretched out into a spectrum, revealing details about

  • the atmosphere.

  • Today, many exoplanets are discovered when they transit across their parent stars. If

  • we happen to see the planet’s orbit edge-on, it will pass in front of its star every cycle.?Thus,

  • tiny, regular brightness dips in the light of a star betray the existence of an orbiting

  • planet. The TRAPPIST telescope at La Silla will help search for these elusive transits.

  • Meanwhile, the Very Large Telescope has studied a transiting planet in exquisite detail. Meet

  • GJ1214b, a super-Earth 2.6 times larger than our home planet.

  • During transits, the planet’s atmosphere partly absorbs the light of the parent star.

  • ESO’s sensitive FORS spectrograph revealed that GJ1214b might well be a hot and steamy

  • sauna world.

  • Gas giants and sauna worlds are inhospitable to life. But the hunt is not over yet. Soon,

  • the new SPHERE instrument will be installed at the VLT. SPHERE will be able to spot faint

  • planets in the glare of their host stars. In 2016, the ESPRESSO spectrograph will arrive

  • at the VLT and greatly surpass the current HARPS instrument.

  • And ESO’s Extremely Large Telescope, once completed, may well find evidence for alien

  • biospheres. On Earth, life is abundant. Northern Chile offers its share of condors, vicuñas,

  • vizcachas and giant cacti. Even the arid soil of the Atacama desert teems with hardy microbes.

  • Weve found the building blocks of life in interstellar space. ?Weve learnt that

  • planets are abundant. Billions of years ago, comets brought water and organic molecules

  • to Earth. Wouldn’t we expect the same thing to happen elsewhere?

  • Or are we alone? It’s the biggest question ever. And the answer is almost within reach.

Have you ever wondered about life in the Universe? Inhabited planets orbiting distant stars?

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