Briefing | Astrobiology

The search for ET hots up

If life exists beyond Earth, science may find it soon

TEEGARDEN’S STAR is a tiny, dim object in the zodiacal constellation of Aries. It has a tenth of the sun’s mass and emits most of its light in the infrared part of the spectrum. That makes it too faint to see with the naked eye, even though it is only 12 light-years away. So far, so unremarkable. But when astronomers at Calar Alto Observatory, in Spain, started scrutinising it, they spotted tiny wobbles in its motion. In 2019, after three years of careful measurement, they concluded that these are a consequence of the gravitational fields of two planets tugging the star around. The innermost, Teegarden b, has roughly the same mass as Earth, receives a similar amount of illumination from its host star and is probably rocky.

This article appeared in the Briefing section of the print edition under the headline “Come out, come out, wherever you are!”

How well will vaccines work?

From the February 13th 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Briefing

An illustration of Donald Trump depicted as a Roman emperor in the Oval Office ncluding a horse as a senator and feature him serving hamburgers and Coca-Cola.

The right in Congress and the courts will reshape Donald Trump’s agenda

As dominant as the new president is, there is still life in Washington’s institutions

 Asylum-seeking migrants walk along the US-Mexico border fence near the Jacumba Hot Spring, California

How far will Donald Trump go to get rid of illegal immigrants?

It is his signature policy, but the obstacles are daunting


A photo collage about plastic surgery boon, featuring public figures like Joe Jonas and Kim Kardashian

Young customers in developing countries propel a boom in plastic surgery

Falling costs and converging beauty standards spur new habits


The Assad regime’s fall voids many of the Middle East’s old certainties

What if Syria abandoned its hostility to the West and stopped menacing Israel?

Syria has exchanged a vile dictator for an uncertain future

It is not clear how stable or how benign the new regime will be

Gambling is growing like gangbusters in America

Technology and legal changes are spurring a betting bonanza